![]() Tunes are organized by Harmonica position and currently include: The difficulty modes of Slow, Normal, & Fast control the overall playback speed, which you can also adjust in the dojo via the speed slider. Select “Pause Mode” if you want the game to stop if you miss the note, and it will wait for you to play the correct note before proceeding to the next one. When the notes scrolling down the screen reach the green “hit zone” you score points by playing the correct note on your own Harmonica. The Melody Dojo is an advanced game mode for practising and learning Songs, Scales, & Riffs. There is also the ability to playback a Song, Scale, or Riff that shows you the notes on the harmonica as they play. An audio recorder also allows you to record short segments to hear your own playing. Play your harmonica and the Real time pitch recognition highlights the notes on screen. You can also switch the display between notes or music intervals. Select from 8 commonly available Diatonic tunings (Major, Natural Minor, Harmonic Minor, Melody maker, Country, Diminished, Powerbender, or Suzuki Ultrabend Sub30) or 7 Chromatic Tunings (Standard/Solo, Bebop, C6, C6 Bebop, Diminished, Augmented, or Whole Tone), all 12 Keys, 18 Scales, and 5 Chord types (Maj, Min, 7th, Aug, Dim). The Tuning Dojo is where you can visualize all the notes on a diatonic (10-hole) harmonica or 12-Hole Chromatic. HarpNinja supports your harmonica learning independent of whatever method you are using. Interactive Circle of Fifths makes music theory easy. Play a game to learn Songs, Scales, & Riffs. Real time pitch recognition shows you what you play. Try the new HarpNinja Diatonic Harmonica! Looking for a smartphone/tablet diatonic harmonica only version of HarpNinja? If you have technical issues or pre-sales questions please contact me via This will ensure you do not experience application glitches due to device resource limitations. With audio intensive apps like HarpNinja you should ensure the tabletĭoes not have apps running in background mode. The current version is optimised for a Tablet user experience. And Michael Rubin.Įventually you'll need all 12 keys, but starting with a C harp is the way to start and the Special 20 is a good harp.There are two versions of HarpNinja, this is the larger featured version. And check out Adam Gussow and Jason Ricci's tutorials on Youtube. He literally wrote Harmonica for Dummies. It's easy to play enough to have fun with, but it's hard enough that it can keep you interested for years. It's a great instrument because it's so portable. Someone like Jason Ricci can make a harmonica just about explode. but then you have the blues guys (let alone the jazz guys!) and they do things with harmonica that will make your head spin. you can master those guys pretty quickly. It's easy to learn to play a bit of harmonica. Winslow Yerxa - Take a lesson with one of the world’s foremost experts and teachersĪuthor, Harmonica For Dummies, Second Edition One big advantage of the harmonica is that you can take it anywhere and take advantage of micro-opportunities to play a little and even do short bursts of concentrated practice. If you want to get really good at it, t's no easier or harder than any other musical instrument.You can find melodies more or less intuitively by just sort of noodling around in the middle four holes, breathing both in and out.It's easy to get sounds out of – just put it in your mouth and breathe.The second and third questions are important because you're asking how easy it is. ![]() What experiences do you bring to playing the harmonica and to making music?.What would like to do that you can’t do now?.What inspires you to play the harmonica?.Is it worth playing? I'd ask you the same questions that I ask my new students: ![]()
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