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jessica-wolff
ParticipantWishing you the best.
jessica-wolff
ParticipantNot very handsome.
March 10, 2014 at 5:45 pm in reply to: Has anyone played the Special Edition Fullsicle by Rees? #78135jessica-wolff
ParticipantI would love to play a Merlin normally but am playing a Troubadour I. Have tried a Harpsicle, not the Spec. Ed., and was underwhelmed. Neat idea, but I didn’t like the feel of it.
jessica-wolff
ParticipantWell, my actual car is a New Beetle–that’s an OLD New Beetle, not a NEW new Beetle–and I see it as more of a banjo than a harp (sassy).
Any suggestions?
jessica-wolff
ParticipantAnja! Apparently the only ones who know where that book is are the cats, who overturned a pile of books in the back room. Sorry!
jessica-wolff
ParticipantWonder if it’s available as a DVD?
jessica-wolff
ParticipantThere’s one I picked up at Vancouver 2011. Will check it out. It has instrux for LEVER harp, believe it or not.
jessica-wolff
ParticipantAs I understand it, Camac harps were modeled to some extent after the old Erards and therefore allowed for more space in the highest octave.
jessica-wolff
ParticipantHere in Central Florida, we’ve had some cold weather, but that means down to 40 or 50 degrees F.
jessica-wolff
ParticipantFinally, a raccoon not dedicated to overturning garbage cans.
jessica-wolff
ParticipantI like decorated harps, but not the Arianna.
jessica-wolff
ParticipantAnything, ANYTHING, is better than the levers I have. (Troubadour with original levers, dating from the 1970s.)
That said, from harps I’ve tried out, I don’t like the Lovelands as well as the Truitts.
jessica-wolff
ParticipantThe same!
jessica-wolff
ParticipantI’ve always loved the ebony-&-bronze look, though my teacher said that it looked dingy earlier than a gilded harp.
December 3, 2013 at 4:59 am in reply to: If you were choosing between cherry and walnut, which would you choose and why? #77794jessica-wolff
ParticipantWell, walnut tends to emphasize the basses, cherry the midrange and maple the upper range. Aesthetically a new walnut is prettier than a new cherry, but as someone pointed out, cherry ages beautifully.
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