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Essential Music Theory for Harp Players


2 amps - Premier Twin 8 and Fender Champ

Tony Smith playing into a Fender Bandmaster amp

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With the Delta Swamp Rats at the Blue Rooster in Sarasota, FL.

Nic Clark on Chromatic

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Nic is playing into a Mission Chicago 32-20 amp using a Front & Center microphone.  This was at The Mile High Blues Society Jam at Ziggies in Denver on Feb 10, 2013.

Tony Smith playing his Bandmaster

Steve Marriner's Stage Rig

Harp Mic Test

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I compare the Front & Center mic, 1959 Shure 440SL mic, and Shure SM57 mic with Bulletizer from Greg Heumann at www.blowsmeaway.com.

Whadda ya think?


Premier Twin 8 and Backing Track


Ronnie Shellist at the MHBS Blues Harp Workshop

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Here is a a snippet of Ronnie Shellist at the MHBS Blues Harp Workshop yesterday, discussing how he likes to mix amp tone with the vocal PA mic.

Ronnie is playing through a '57 Supro he found at a thrift shop for $79. The guitarist on stage with him is Matt Hendricks, a very fine blues player and singer who recently moved from Chicago to Denver.

Blues Harp Solos

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Here are three short video clips of blues harp solos from the Mile High Blues Society jam at Ziggies in Denver, Mar 10, 2013. The players are Ronnie Shellist, Gregg MacKenzie, and Nic Clark,

I brought two amps to the jam: Bassman and Mission 32-20. Just for fun, can you guess which player is playing which amp? No pedals or effects (not even delay) on either amp.

Watts Revisited

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Somebody asked me in another forum why I use the term “watts at clipping” to describe the power an amp makes.  I thought I’d devote a new blog post to this topic.

It may surprise you to know there is no hard and fast formula that amp makes use to calculate exactly how many watts their harp amps make.  In 2009 I researched an article I was writing on this topic by contacting all the big harp amp makers at the time to find out how they arrived at their wattage claims.  Some of these amp makers were quite annoyed that I even asked the question.

I believe we need a standardized method for calculating amp power so the numbers are meaningful and consumers can make rational, informed decisions.  Wattage numbers in amps are like horsepower figures in cars.  There is a powerful incentive to fudge the numbers upwards – higher than your competitors – because many buyers are greatly influenced by it.

You've probably seen wattage claims for boom boxes or car audio or computer speakers that seem, um, unlikely.  They sometimes claim hundreds of watts when the truth is a small fraction of that.  Harp amp makers have been more restrained in their numbers, but still there is no real standardization.

Those of you who like vintage hifi gear will recognize this phrase:  110 watts RMS per channel @ 8 ohms from 20 to 20K Hz with .1% THD.  I found that harp amp makers borrow parts of that formula to arrive at their wattage spec.

This is what they do:  They drive the amp with a test tone – a sine wave – and measure the AC output at the speaker tap by watching the waveform on a scope.  You may have opinions about what the proper method should be, but that is what they actually do.

One problem is that the frequency and amplitude of the test tone is not uniform (and certainly not announced by the amp maker) and it can make a big difference.  Another problem is the amount of deformation they tolerate in the wave form at the point they claim as their wattage number.  In other words (as in the hifi formula), how much distortion is included in the number?

This is where the question arose in the other forum:  What the heck is wrong with distortion?  We love distortion in our tone, right?

Indeed we do, but for the sake of arriving at a meaningful wattage number that allows us to make real comparisons we have to stipulate the level of distortion in the test.  The easiest and best way to do that is to measure the amp’s power at the point that the sine wave begins to clip.  That is a very good indication of the amp’s true strength.

Can the amp make more power beyond the point of clipping?  Sure.  But depending on the design of the amp the distortion (the deformation of the sine wave) can start to sound unappealing pretty quickly.  Amp makers could just crank everything to the max and report that number but it would be unrealistic and meaningless for musicians, and there are lots of ways to juice the max number.  We want to know:  How much clean power can the amp make?  How does it compare with other amps?

Here is what I am suggesting as a standard for harp amp makers:  Drive the amp with 150mvac@130Hz and measure power as peak clean voltage into the appropriate true non-reactive load.

Is it a perfect formula?  Probably not, but it is not meant to be.   We need to insist that amp makers use a standard, uniform and verifiable method of calculating their wattage claims, and this method is a good place to start that conversation.

New Small amp from Mission Amps

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This is the new small amp from Bruce at Mission Amps, sitting on the bench in his shop. The amp is now down in my amp room. Bruce asked me to thrash it out for a couple weeks.

A few design decisions have been made:

-It will come in a tweed Harvard cab, as you see in the picture.
-The speaker will be the 10-inch Eminence Lil Buddy.
-The power tubes will be two 6V6,
-The preamp tube will be a 12AY7.
-It will have a line out.
-It will sell for under $900.

It makes an honest 15 watts and sounds great. It weighs in at 24 pounds.  I'll put up some videos over the next few days to show how it sounds. I also plan to take it to Doc Brown's Jam at Ziggies in Denver on Sunday to let other players try it and get their opinions.

One thing the amp does not have is a name. Bruce wants to hear your suggestions. The amp is cathode biased for some mellow crunch and warm sag tone. You got a name for that? Let me know and I'll pass it along.

1949 Gibson BR-9

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These were originally packaged and sold with a Gibson lap guitar. Very cool; the amp has two 6V6 power tubes and it uses an interstage transformer (not a phase inverter tube) to drive them in push-pull. It makes maybe 10 watts. 

The cab is a little trapezoidal thing, with a 10-inch field coil speaker. One knob for volume, no tone control. It is similar to the 1947 Gibson amp I once had. It has a nice old school tone.





The Delta Sonic from Mission Amps

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A new small harp amp from Bruce Collins at Mission Amps - 15 watts from two 6V6 power tubes, with a single 10-inch speaker in a tweed "Harvard" cab.  In this video I'm using an MXR Carbon Copy pedal for a touch of slap back.

www.MissionHarpAmps.com

Blues Harp Solos - Mission Delta Sonic Amp

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Gregg MacKenzie and Nic Clark at The Mile High Blues Society Jam at Ziggies Saloon in Denver CO, April 7, 2013.

New "Family Photo"

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Clockwise from upper left: 1962 Premier Twin 8, 1970 Fender Champ, 1964 Marvel, Mission Delta Sonic, Mission 32-20, 1991 Fender Bassman. 

And right in the middle is the Electro Harmonix 44 Magnum.

Nic Clark Solo

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This is from the Mile High Blues Society Jam at Ziggies in Denver last night. In this clip Nic does a good job of illustrating a couple of the soloing strategies we teach at our "Blues Jam 101" seminars. He starts out simple and repetitive, with mostly single notes low on the harp. Through the solo he builds tension by moving up the harp and playing more double stops and chords. He does some interesting things here.

Nic is playing a Mission 32-20 1x12 amp that Bruce Collins built for a good local player. He is using my 1959 Shure 440SL microphone and zero effects.

The jam was packed! Great music and great people. All jams should be like that.

Mission Delta Sonic Amp - Line Out Test

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This is the 15-watt Mission Delta Sonic blues harp amp. The first clip is the amp by itself, and the second clip is the amp plus a line out to a PA system: Mackie 808M and Mackie speakers - typical bar band PA system.

I'm using a touch of delay (MXR Carbon Copy) for slap back. There are no effects in the PA channel. The amp is EQ'd in the PA channel with HIGHs and MIDs rolled off and the LOWs boosted.

I played the amp at a gig with a loud blues band last Saturday, and the line out is the big problem solver. Once you get it dialed in it sounds huge. I even had a bit in the monitors.

The amp has a 12AY7 in the preamp socket, and two JJ Tesla 6V6 power tubes. Bruce at Mission Amps made a couple tweaks to the tone stack since the last time you heard the amp. This is the final configuration. 

The Delta Sonic Amp at the Blues Jam

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Gregg MacKenzie and Nic Clark show off their old school chops at The Mile High Blues Society Jam at Ziggies in Denver, Cinco de Mayo, 2013.  They are both playing through my rig:  Mission Delta Sonic Amp and 1959 Shure 440SL microphone.

Sonny Jr 410 for Sale - $1200 + shipping

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The amp belongs to Doug Lohnes, a Portland OR harp player and all 'round good guy..  He bought it Apr 24 for $1550 and has decided to sell it and buy a different amp.  The amp is in perfect working order.  You can find Doug on Facebook or contact me and I'll put him in touch with you.

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