I don't know about you, but I play harp every once in a while, and have a hard time spending $30 for a good harp. I see a set of these for around $30 and wonder if they will honk.
Has anyone here tried one?
Has anyone here tried one?
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This liquor is just right. Any worse and I wouldn't be able to drink it, any better and you wouldn't have given me any - Anon., old Southern saying
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0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. I don't know about you, but I play harp every once in a while, and have a hard time spending $30 for a good harp. I see a set of these for around $30 and wonder if they will honk.
Has anyone here tried one? I got a box set of Hering Harmonicas for teaching from Harmonicas and Stuff (are they still around?) for about $45 a a couple of years ago and they worked fine. I think there are 6 or 7 in the set in a plastic box. They sound good but never have gigged with them extensively. Bought some expensive Herings that sound great.
RobBob Cambio
I think that the Herring 1923 model harmonicas will beat the snot out of a Hohner Marine Band, Blues Harp, Special 20 etc. No contest, they're like real instruments.
I think Hohners quality control has really slipped in the past few years and it's easy to get a dud, either with a bad note or leaky reed plates. The Herrings that I've had are nice and tight and in tune right out of the box. The package sets of harps tend to be cheap, Chinese made instruments and, like most things, you get what you pay for. I usually buy cheap harps for my son, who is two, but now he knows the difference and will only play the Herrings. The Herring 1923's go for about $20 each, and will last a good long time. Good luck, Todd I prefer Honer's Golden Melody formerly Navy Band. All plastic interior (but nice high quality plastic) and nicely streamline shape. Great mellow sound too. Don't warp up when you soak 'em!
The Herings i was referring to were called Free Blues. I do not see them on their site now but they do list this:
Hering Blues Harmonica Hering Blues Harmonica Reedplates assembled to the gold plastic body with 3 self-tapping screws, making maintenance easy. Air-tight assembly for excellent response and tone quality. 20 Reeds harmonica These are $17 each. You get what you pay for. RobBob They're TERRIBLE. But the box they come in is pretty handy - maybe even worth the price o' the whole set.
Sp20's aren't that expensive - around $22.00 if you look around (as of 10/08). A good quality cheap alternative is the Big River. Pages: [1] Go Up
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