Header Graphic
Dirty-South Blues Harp forum: wail on! > question for blues harpists: your dream.....
question for blues harpists:  your dream.....
Login  |  Register
Page: 1 2

kudzurunner
5099 posts
Nov 01, 2014
3:59 PM
The question isn't quite what you'd think.

I'm not interested in your dream concert (Muddy and the Wolf co-bill with Little Walter; that's easy). Or your dream jam session.

I'm interested in what's MISSING from what's going on right now in the blues harmonica world. And you're not allowed to wish that some dead player were here to rescue us.

If, as a blues harmonica player, you could put your hands on the levers of cultural power and decree that blues harmonica suddenly became....viral, what would that look like?

It might certainly consist of taking some contemporary player and putting him in a place where he's never been. (Dennis Gruenling on "Scandal"??)

What would the show (TV, variety, singing) or movie (action, drama, chick flick) be, or sound like? What would the single sound like? What would the Kennedy Center honor look like?

There was a video that had 2 million hits when the Today show brought it to people's attention on Tuesday or Wednesday. Now it has 27 million hits. Perhaps you've seen it (and please do not make this thread about the video; do that on another forum):



Can you imagine a video with the same premise--female harmonica player walks for 10 hours throughout NYC, playing--going viral? Or a copycat video in which one of you guys did the same thing? Just walked through the streets of NYC, blowing harp, with the most intersting 90 seconds compressed into one video dedicated to a humane cause?

If I were still living in NYC, I would have made that video this weekend.

What's your dream? Imagine if, for one moment, blues harmonica could capture the attention of America, or the world. What would that look like?

Last Edited by kudzurunner on Nov 01, 2014 4:06 PM
kudzurunner
5100 posts
Nov 01, 2014
4:03 PM
Let me stress the point I just made in passing: do NOT make this thread a conversation about the merits or demerits of the video I've posted above. I'm looking for positive suggestions about what YOU would do if you could make blues harmonica take center stage in our viralized world. By any means necessary. It started here.

What is YOUR dream?

Last Edited by kudzurunner on Nov 01, 2014 4:04 PM
davew
22 posts
Nov 01, 2014
7:08 PM
Well, you really can't post a video like that and then have us not talk about it, it's something that has commentary all over it ! I'm not sure what you are asking for. DW
SuperBee
2256 posts
Nov 01, 2014
7:20 PM
i dont think the mission statement is very complicated..its not about that video, its a tangent.
but i dont have any harp dreams...
davew
23 posts
Nov 01, 2014
7:27 PM
What would I do if I could make blues harmonica take
center stage in a viralized world? I had better play my ass off...... DW
davew
24 posts
Nov 01, 2014
7:27 PM
What would I do if I could make blues harmonica take
center stage in a viralized world? I had better play my ass off...... DW
SuperBee
2257 posts
Nov 01, 2014
7:37 PM
or hope there is a vaccine
Leatherlips
295 posts
Nov 01, 2014
8:31 PM
Could be a short film of a traveller who is a competent harp player visiting different cities that have blues bars. The player could ask to play along with the hot band playing at the venue.
They always totally knock the socks off any number played and they start to get a name for themselves.
People start talking about this unreal player and how they think they might take up the challenge of playing this powerful little instrument as it sure has kudos in the right hands. Etc, etc.
Meaux Jeaux
10 posts
Nov 01, 2014
9:05 PM
Maybe it could be about someone, male or female, that
had surgery to have their tongue split (like the tattooed "Lizard" Man)who could play double octaves,
wild splits, amazing things never before possible on harmonica. Whoa, I think there is a dragon in my kitchen.:)
Peter
JInx
929 posts
Nov 01, 2014
9:31 PM
The shoot opens from a draped curtain...a white boy stomps out some horrid brash bluesy harp while a peirced african American nipple is exposed with tongue and smiles
----------
didjcripey
838 posts
Nov 01, 2014
10:05 PM
I'm with Super Bee; I have no harp dreams. I have no desire for anything to do with harp to go viral. I enjoy the fact that Harp is a 'novelty' instrument, and it has a relatively low profile. Its different, and a little quirky, lots of people like it, and not many can play. Its part of the attraction for me.

For me, nothing is missing in the harmonica world.
----------
Lucky Lester

Last Edited by didjcripey on Nov 01, 2014 10:06 PM
KingoBad
1555 posts
Nov 01, 2014
10:57 PM
If it is going to be "viral". Then it is going to be someone with charisma and a message in a high production video the likes of Pharrell Williams' Happy.

Not my choice, but that is the landscape.

It can still be blues, but it must be modernly accessible. And no gravely ass wanna be singers. It's gonna be someone with a voice.

It is also going to be someone with an imagination on how to make their music "visual."

I actually think that Alex Paclin was on the right track with his slick videos. I haven't seen any in a while...

----------
Danny
6SN7
487 posts
Nov 01, 2014
11:15 PM
Years ago Annie Lennox has a huge hit with Missionary Man and it had a great harp solo by Jimmy Z. It was a worldwide hit. I would love to see Lady Gaga do a swing tune with Tony Bennett and include a solo by Dennis Greunling or Rod Piazza. It's not a stretch...
mastercaster
89 posts
Nov 02, 2014
4:05 AM
@ Leatherlips ...

In fact I am doing almost as your 'dream' suggests .. I am on a trip ... going to blues bars in SE Asia ...

I'm in Chiang Mai Thailand now , tonight I expect to play at a brand new Sun. nite open mike with 2 other americans, 1 guitar , 1 drums & my harp and some vocals .. after playing the last few weeks open mike at other venue's .. I'm invited onstage wether jam nite or not ..

Now the folks here know what a pretty good blues harp sounds like live ..

Getting onstage is not so easy if folks haven't heard you play before & there is sometimes a 'clique' of locals that needs to be opened ..

In Bangkok there are a few very good blues musicians .. The top harp player there is a violin player in the Bangkok symphony as his day job .. and Chicago blues harp & vocals for his nite job .. very nice guy & invites me up , and keeps me up ... though his playing is pretty much .. note 4 note and tone 4 tone with anyone he wants to sound like ...

If anyone is in BKK .. check out Adhere 13 , close to Koh San ... great venue , nice folks without any bs .. the owner Pong , after talking a bit .. invited me right up to play .. and , after that it was hard to get him let me off the stage ..

BTW thanks to Gregg as I am carrying one of his 545 mic's with me .. folks really open up when they see that !

And hopefully , as several folks have expressed some interest is picking up the blues harp .. Maybe it'll happen ??

Cheers

Last Edited by mastercaster on Nov 03, 2014 3:56 AM
kudzurunner
5101 posts
Nov 02, 2014
5:17 AM
Now that I think about it, Greg Zlap took his shot at this sort of thing three years ago. The entire video, on the streets of Paris, was filmed in one long uncut tracking shot. This is what it looks like when a top harp player says, "If I could become a pop star, this is how I would do it." I don't know if it worked, but I admire his ambition! This is one version--but only one version--of an answer to my question:

Last Edited by kudzurunner on Nov 02, 2014 5:22 AM
Goldbrick
749 posts
Nov 02, 2014
5:35 AM
I used to have a job that we were required to park off site and take a shuttle bus to the job.

I worked rotating shifts and came in contact with lots of different folks

Often I would sit in the back and softly play some harp-usually just some train stuff or boogie rhythm to pass the time.

People almost always reacted positively and bus drivers loved it. Friends who still work there tell me they still ask about the " harmonica guy"

If I had the time and money - I always thought it would be cool to take a bus ride on the "old hound dog" from maybe Miami to Houston playing some harp or maybe a with a better harp player and me playing some hand percussion and film the results
pharpo
747 posts
Nov 02, 2014
6:16 AM
preface...I don't watch this show, but my better half does......

Adam...On "Dancing With the Stars" playing "Easy" while doing a foxtrot with his partner.

I'd watch that one !
----------
Photobucket

Procrastinator Emeritus
harpdude61
2215 posts
Nov 02, 2014
6:17 AM
I agree with KingoBad. Something like Alex Paclin (A-Pac) does could go viral. He is a fantastic player with talent and imagination in several areas.

He used to chime in here once in awhile.
----------
www.facebook.com/catfishfryeband
Barley Nectar
561 posts
Nov 02, 2014
7:13 AM
Play the harmonica as a musical instrument that can be used in all genres, quite talking about "Blues Harp"
We are our own worst enemies...BN
dougharps
762 posts
Nov 02, 2014
11:23 AM
I don't think there is anything missing with blues harp. Blues and harp in general have had cyclical popularity.

I think that the core issue is that live music events involve the audience as symbiotic to the performance, and electronic media creates distance and separation from the performance. Passive "cool" media is replacing those live music experiences.

Dionysian vs. Apollonian.

Cool vs. Hot media.
Yes, McCluhan...

Live music is again on the ebb, but these trends are cyclical. One can only hope that younger audiences come to appreciate being there, NOW, in the moment, experiencing the creation of music instead of sitting at home and clicking on YouTube.

Oh, I do have a dream of more Hill Country Harmonica events. The two I attended were awesome!
----------

Doug S.
Rhartt1234
152 posts
Nov 02, 2014
11:30 AM
The Buddy Greene @ Carnegie Hall video already went viral. Though not Blues it was brilliantly and beautifully played, but still portrayed the harmonica as a novelty instrument.

Viral videos are inherently short-lived and disposable. They come, make the rounds of social media and are forgotten. Something like that isn't going raise the profile of the instrument or Blues music and hopefully get me more gigs.
garry
540 posts
Nov 02, 2014
7:47 PM
I think this one has the right ingredients. It's fun, humorous, playful. It features great harp, but it's not entirely about harp.


----------
nacoran
8085 posts
Nov 02, 2014
9:55 PM
I was reading a thread over on Facebook and a new player was asking how to classify Tom Petty's harp. They were a fan. Someone else, probably with slower record sales than Mr. Petty, jumped in to poopoo his playing. Petty is not a technical master on harp, but most people know he plays harp, lots of people know who he is and a lot of people like him (I actually enjoy playing along on some of his tunes- they are easy, but catchy). I think playing what is popular is probably a better formula than playing what is traditional. Even Petty is dated at this point. Being young yourself probably wouldn't hurt. A tween playing harp on a Disney show could probably move a lot of records and make harp popular. Before he was shot, if you'd asked me who was more likely to have a hit song in the next year I would have picked Bad News Brown over Kim Wilson. (If he'd been a little bigger and THEN got shot... nothing boost record sales like being shot, RIP BNB. Not a great career move for obvious other reasons.

A catchy video where the person is either sexy or is surrounded by people who are sexy, something fresh and indie sounding? A few months back I watched a video a couple dozen times. I didn't particularly like the song but they were using a projector and fog to make images on the fog. I hadn't seen anything in that vein as visually sophisticated. Of course, now, that's been done. Find a film student who is experimenting with new techniques. I just watched a video about new stabilizing software for cameras and realized that I'd seen the artifacts of it but hadn't identified what it was. It looked, for want of better words, different and new. Autotune/pixelate a harp? Find whatever the trend is and try to get out ahead of it. If I knew what that meant in real terms I would be famous.

----------
Nate
Facebook
Thread Organizer (A list of all sorts of useful threads)

First Post- May 8, 2009
walterharp
1552 posts
Nov 03, 2014
10:05 AM
I think if there was a fundamental shift such that

1) live music became more essential and popular to younger people than it is now

and

2) Blues had some small part of that

and

3) there was a law against blues bands that had no harp.

sort of tongue in cheek, but i cannot for the life of me see why people don't get how much better live music is.. and wish they would move back that way.
Diggsblues
1601 posts
Nov 03, 2014
10:45 AM
If I became Steven Seagal's harmonica player and
he got a hit TV show that the band played once a week on
and then that got posted to Youtube once a week.
----------
atty1chgo
1189 posts
Nov 03, 2014
10:51 AM
I would like to see the late night talk shows have a BLUES BAND on as a musical guest once a month at least. The blues don't even get that as a collective of all of the shows COMBINED. There is plenty of good music to be showcased. That is the main problem with LA, NY, and Hollywood. It has to be someone that the young kids listen to, that is selling, or it won't be on the air. And with the networks having interests in record companies, there is self-interest at play.

@ nacoran - actually, I think that lately Tom Petty leaves his harp duties to Scott Thurston, the rhythm guitarist in the band.

Last Edited by atty1chgo on Nov 03, 2014 11:05 AM
JTThirty
254 posts
Nov 03, 2014
11:58 AM
My dream would be for Martin Scorcese to make movies of my crime novels (he is a blues fan). Maybe sign Bruce Willis to play one of my harp playing protagonists and someone like Jamie Fox as the other. They battle evil while leading a two harp band throughout the three books.. There would be tons of classic blues harp swirling around the sound track. Yeah. That would work.
----------
Ricky B
http://www.bushdogblues.blogspot.com
RIVER BOTTOM BLUES--crime novel for blues fans available at Amazon/B&N and my blog
THE DEVIL'S BLUES--ditto
HOWLING MOUNTAIN BLUES--due out early 2015
kudzurunner
5107 posts
Nov 03, 2014
12:14 PM
@Garry: well there you fing go! I missed that the first time around: our Boris. Yes! That's exactly the sort of thing I mean. I like everything about the video--but especially the proliferation of cameraphones, "sharing."

I'm going to create a new webpage and start posting the best videos of this sort, which will help folks like Boris who have created them but will also perhaps convince others to take a stab.

Please post the best video or two of Alex Paclin's, somebody. He did a handful of them two or three years ago.

@atty: I completely agree with you. Put good live blues on one of the late night shows. Of course, Jimmy Vivino plays great live blues, and he's been around for quite a while......

Last Edited by kudzurunner on Nov 03, 2014 12:17 PM
Goldbrick
753 posts
Nov 03, 2014
1:08 PM
Anybody remember Jimmy's big brother Floyd who had a cable access show in Jersey? NY area?He had lots of interesting musical guests in " informal" settings

BronzeWailer
1507 posts
Nov 04, 2014
1:50 AM
I don't think musicianship alone is enough. I have seen Christelle blow amazing harp in the middle of Sydney only to be almost completely ignored. People don't know what they are hearing, unfortunately.

I agree with the suggestion of A-Pac.

A-Pac plays guitar, harp, writes songs, sings and makes great videos. Young, good looking and has a sense of humour too.









Some multiple threat like Alex is most likely IMHO, or someone fusing other modern elements, like Brandon Bailey. Harpboxing may be the way to go.

Don't forget Jantso Jokelin's new take on traininess.



I am doing a bit to preach the virtues of this instrument by busking, but I think harp will remain a niche/novelty/folk/blues/and occasional other genre instrument.


BronzeWailer's YouTube
The Iceman
2239 posts
Nov 04, 2014
5:24 AM
One of the problems may be inherent in how harmonica is played. Close head shots seem to mostly have a silly look to them. Many who play to a camera stare into it with wide eyes and may exaggerate some movements which reinforces that silly visual. Mostly only the pros (Wilson, Estrin etc) have a classy look.

Guess my dream would be that amateurs, jammers and video posters learn how to visually project class.
----------
The Iceman
ted burke
8 posts
Nov 04, 2014
9:24 AM
I wish there was a more natural way for harmonica performers to be theatrical without looking like they are having seizures and otherwise thrashing about . A harp player cannot look dramatic trying to "windmill" a harmonica, ala Pete Townsend, and playing with one hand seems unintentionally fairy tale or metaloid fist pumping. You know, while one hand holds the instrument and the musician furiously rips his lips trying to keep his intonation straight , the other makes gestures to illustrate and accentuate the mood; it looks silly and empty, frankly. I do like the intensity Jason Ricci brings to his shows; even then, though, he is riveting by dent of his concentration on the instrument , his whole body rocking in place as he executes the amazing and the phenomenal. What I dream of , I suppose, is a class of harmonica player who, with the chops equal to Sugar Blue and Butter, a voice similar in blues texture to Paul Rodgers, stage moves on a par with Mick Jagger or Prince. I dream of this being the norm and not the exception.
----------
Ted Burke
__________________
ted-burke.com
tburke4@san.rr.com
nacoran
8088 posts
Nov 04, 2014
9:51 AM
I was thinking about the look of the harmonica player too. We cover half our face when playing, which makes it hard to engage with the crowd.

That said, harp players don't need to actually be playing the harp in their videos. You could do anything from story videos to straight up fantasia stuff.

The catchiest harp videos I've seen would include that silly Goodyear ad with the animals playing instruments (and not getting run over), that crazy Italian song and some of J-Sin's stuff. (Can't find the animals.)







----------
Nate
Facebook
Thread Organizer (A list of all sorts of useful threads)

First Post- May 8, 2009
ted burke
9 posts
Nov 04, 2014
10:27 AM
I appreciate your notion that the harmonica player needn't be playing his instrument to be in the video, but this reduces the harp to a prop. I guess part of my fantasy is to have the harp player be somehow theatrical with the harp without seeming cornball. I suppose that is something I'll be trying to figure out for awhile.
----------
Ted Burke
__________________
ted-burke.com
tburke4@san.rr.com
kudzurunner
5112 posts
Nov 04, 2014
10:39 AM
I'd like to see a video in which somebody combines parcours and harmonica:

Last Edited by kudzurunner on Nov 04, 2014 10:39 AM
kudzurunner
5113 posts
Nov 04, 2014
10:41 AM
Actually, something like this might just do the trick..not. It has a certain...thing, though.

smwoerner
281 posts
Nov 04, 2014
11:00 AM
How about Cart Drifting and Harmonica...Music starts about 3:15, harp at about 3:30. Welcome to popular culture...



----------
Purveyor of Optimized New and Refurbished Harmonicas.

scott@scottwoerner.com
isaacullah
2871 posts
Nov 04, 2014
12:13 PM
Some of J-Sin's stuff, and Boris's vid above definitely fit the bill. I'm assuming that the bill is sort of a "man on the street" bit, right? Taking the harmonica to the people? Kind of like....Satan and Adam showing up in a 1987 U2 vid?



As much as I'm not a fan of Yuri Lane, his "Beatbox Harmonica to the People" has more than 650,000 views on YouTube. It seems to fit all the criteria for whatever this kind of thing is called:



His harp playing does absolutely nothing for me, however.
----------
Super Awesome!
   YouTube!                 Soundcloud!
isaacullah
2872 posts
Nov 04, 2014
12:24 PM
This dude's stuff fits the bill too:

No harp in that one, however he does play harp [marginally] better than Yuri Lane:



He does much better with the Pan pipes.
----------
Super Awesome!
   YouTube!                 Soundcloud!
BronzeWailer
1509 posts
Nov 04, 2014
12:26 PM
Agree with you on YL, Isaac. We need a harp player that can beat box; not a beatboxer who owns a harp. I have been looking at various harp/beatboxer vids, and most of the harp playing is excruciating.

BronzeWailer's YouTube
Michael Rubin
995 posts
Nov 04, 2014
12:31 PM
We need two pop music bands each featuring harmonica players, preferably one who is the lead singer and one who is not. Harp is all they play. They have extremely different styles. Both bands have multiple hits.

Harp would be everywhere.

The problem with Blues Traveler is it was just one guy. Any band with a harp player in popular music, even if he didn't sound a THING like Popper, which is likely, gets pigeonholed into the Blues Traveler category and it limits their success.

Once pop harmonica has been established as a viable thing, blues harp would be reestablished as a necessary member of blues bands and then a good blues band with a harp player would have some hits and wa la blues resurgence.
BronzeWailer
1510 posts
Nov 04, 2014
12:46 PM
Rory McLeod can tap, play harp and sing.




BronzeWailer's YouTube
kudzurunner
5114 posts
Nov 04, 2014
2:52 PM
Some amazing videos, guys. Thanks. Rory McLeod--I've seen that video once or twice before, but it really leaps out here as way before its time. And yes: he can sing, tap, and play. (And hoot.) It definitely goes on whatever page I'm going to create for the best of this stuff. Alex Paclin's woodchuck (or rabbit?) video goes there, too. This is wonderfully musical, creative, forward looking stuff.
nacoran
8092 posts
Nov 04, 2014
3:05 PM
Ted, I'm just saying that it doesn't visually have to be there. Lot's of music videos only have the singer occasionally mouthing the lyrics. The rest of the time they are having fun doing other things.

I've got a couple visual ideas myself, but I'm still hoping to pull them off myself.

Some of the ideas I've seen for harp theatrics, well, it's tough, but there was that German guy who had the harmonica with the LEDs in it that could change the color of the harp. You can go traditional with Lederhosen,... I've thought as a one off sort of thing you might be able to rig a joy buzzer (they usually work by spinning, at least the ones I've seen) to spin the harmonica in your hand like ZZ Top does with their guitars. If you are young and spry you can put your body into it. I'd creek and brake, and I'm younger than some. You can do this-



Remember too, that most of the time when you are doing a video with high production values you are lip syncing and splicing your video over a pre-recorded track. We all make funny faces when we sing. We can make them less funny and more even when we aren't actually playing. That can work for the harp too. I don't know if the Bad News Brown video I posted was live sound. I doubt it. Notice how in the beginning of the video he doesn't do any cupping. It's a closeup of his face and his hand is as out of the way as it can be. Lots of us obsess about our sound but very few of us spend a lot of time making polished looking videos.

Figure out who your audience is and learn all the signifiers. Are you appealing to hipsters? Tweens? Millennials? Baby Boomers? Figure out what you need to do to seem authentic to them. Some of the stuff is intentional, some of it is accidental, but people pick up on all those cues. Look at Adam's first tutorials. He identifies himself right from the start as 'Adam Gussow from Satan and Adam'. Just the way he constructs that, even if you didn't know who Satan and Adam were you know that they were something. He's established that he is not just some random guy (crooked lamp aside!) He had a relatively clean background (later he'd have books or be in his car- maybe it was coincidence but the more 'academic' ones, like the ones where he actually shows you the 12 bar progression on a piece of paper he does it in his office (wearing a turtleneck!). When he is talking about the history of the blues he heads on out to the crossroads.

I've railed a couple times against guys getting all dressed up in a suit to play the blues. It all depends on your audience. I personally think it sends the wrong identifiers in most situations. It's want my dad would do (if he were a bluesman. He was a teacher so he dresses like a teacher). I usually dress fairly similar to who I expect to see out there. I clean up. I shave so I don't look too scruffy. People usually guess I'm 10+ years younger than I actually am. That's just how I roll. (Do the kids still say that? Getting old stinks!)

----------
Nate
Facebook
Thread Organizer (A list of all sorts of useful threads)

First Post- May 8, 2009
LadyArdRhi
3 posts
Nov 04, 2014
3:44 PM
Sort of like Brandon O. Bailey's album "Harpbox"?

http://youtu.be/LN2vrmduTYQ

He did an interview for "Harmonica Happenings" back in Spring 2011.
nacoran
8094 posts
Nov 04, 2014
4:21 PM
Shoot. It ate my post. It was a good one too.

Oh well. Compare Brandon to Son of Dave.



Notice Son of Dave is wearing a similar sort of outfit, but it's not sized quite right, and he's got sneakers on. It's like he's winking at the audience saying, "Okay, I'm going to play you some blues and give a nod to the tradition, but it's going to be modern". It's the difference between being retro or just being behind the times.

Me, maybe I'm stuck in the grunge era. I've got a neighbor who is stuck in the glamrock era, so I guess I should count myself lucky. I'm too bald for big hair!

----------
Nate
Facebook
Thread Organizer (A list of all sorts of useful threads)

First Post- May 8, 2009
smwoerner
282 posts
Nov 04, 2014
5:05 PM
Since the thread is going in this direction I think we have to mention Lonesome Dave Ferguson. What Dave is able to do as good as anyone playing now is to make the harmonica both a lead instrument, a fills instrument and rhythm instrument.



I think is solo stuff is awesome...



----------
Purveyor of Optimized New and Refurbished Harmonicas.

scott@scottwoerner.com
Komuso
441 posts
Nov 06, 2014
5:23 PM
I think you need a better example video

Hollaback and Why Everyone Needs Better Research Methods
And Why All Data Needs Theory


----------
Paul Cohen aka Komuso Tokugawa
HarpNinja - Your harmonica Mojo Dojo
Bringing the Boogie to the Bitstream
nacoran
8106 posts
Nov 07, 2014
9:59 AM
Komuso, the point was it went viral. It presented it's thesis in a way that made people take notice and started a discussion. Adam specifically asked that only that aspect get examined in this thread.

Maybe another, closer topic would have been the Harlem Shuffle? What would it take for a video about harmonica to get that kind of audience?

----------
Nate
Facebook
Thread Organizer (A list of all sorts of useful threads)

First Post- May 8, 2009
Komuso
444 posts
Nov 07, 2014
4:22 PM
"Adam specifically asked that only that aspect get examined in this thread."

Sure, but there's plenty of other viral videos that would have made a better example. It's easy to see why that video got the hits SEX LOOK HERE (assuming they aren't bought as part of the marketing campaign) but if it turns out there are serious ethical issues with it then people should be made aware.

"What would it take for a video about harmonica to get that kind of audience?"

SEX LOOK HERE


----------
Paul Cohen aka Komuso Tokugawa
HarpNinja - Your harmonica Mojo Dojo
Bringing the Boogie to the Bitstream

Last Edited by Komuso on Nov 07, 2014 4:30 PM


Post a Message



(8192 Characters Left)


Modern Blues Harmonica supports

§The Jazz Foundation of America

and

§The Innocence Project

 

 

 

ADAM GUSSOW is an official endorser for HOHNER HARMONICAS