|
Categories - Copywriting - Shopping - Free Online Business Help - Telecommunications
Services
Articles: Recreation - The
Harmonica
By Peter
Lenkefi
It's impossible to imagine the
blues without the Mississippi sax -- otherwise known as the blues
harp. The harmonica has a voice that cuts through - when the guitar
player will turn down, of
course.
The blues harp possibly reached
it's highest level of perfection with Little Walter, know to the
Bureau of Statistics as Marion Walter
Jacobs.
The harmonica goes back to an
invention by the Chinese empress Nyn-Kwa, a reed instrument known as
the Sheng (meaning sublime voice). This was about 3,000 BCE, so
there probably wasn't much blues jamming going on around the
palace.The more modern version came from the work of Christian
Friedrich Ludwig Bushmann in 1821. Bushmann was a 16 year old
clockmaker in Germany who lashed together 15 separate pitch pipes
and called it a "mund-eaoline" which means "mouth
harp."
The harp loved by classic blues
players, the Marine Band, came along in 1896 and could be yours for
a mere fifty cents.
The move into blues for the
harp happened over a period of time and there are various theories
and "firsts" to contend with. Owing to the instrument's ability to
sound like a train gave it a place in early pieces such as Railroad
Piece by Palmer Bailey or Railroad Blues by Freeman Stowers.
According to some, the "mama" sound the harmonica makes put it in
several songs, along with its ability to sound like yelping dogs
(especially the way some play it), a natural for blues about prisons
and escapes.
Maybe the first real
blues-blues comes from Jaybird Coleman who recorded between 1927 and
1930. The songs were very much in the blues vein and, as a strange
aside, it is said that Jaybird Coleman was managed by the Ku Klux
Klan in 1929.
|