Buy Low Price From Here Now
This instrument is known by many names. Most commonly it is referred to as a Jews Harp. Other terms used include Jaw Harp and Juice Harp.The Juice Harp is played by holding the instrument between the teeth and or lips. You then pluck the metal reed with your finger. This simple instrument gives you an amazing range of tones and pitches just by varying your mouth shape and degree of plucking. Many of us were first exposed to this instrument by the most famous of all Juice Harp Players, Snoopy! Snoopy even has his own signature model of Juice Harp.
Readmore
Technical Details
- Make new sounds on one of the world's oldest instruments with "Snoopy's Harp"- This jaw harp is played by holding the instrument between your teeth, and plucking the tongue of the jaw harp
- You can get all kinds of tones and sounds by varying the shape of your mouth
- The all-metal "Snoopy's Harp" measures about four inches long
- It's easy to play...and loads of fun!
See more technical details
By Gregory Afghani (OC, California)
Great little harp for kids. It actually works. It came as described, packaged well. This is a good gift for kids for play and as a learning tool for more advanced instruments. It's also a great gag gift for family, friends, office "white elephant" events, etc. It can also be used by middle aged guys who want to show up to a social function and amuse but mostly annoy people.
By Oscar Garcia (Austin, TX)
when I first got the Snoopy harp I could not get any sound what so ever. after looking at pictures online I noticed that the bars were spaced farther apart than those pictured. After some work with pressure pliers I got the harp to play.
This seems to be a common problem with the mass produced Jew harps as I've had to do the same to 2 more harps I've gotten
By C. Koehne (San Francisco, CA)
These are incredibly lame, even professionals cannot even get a sound out of them. Do not waste your money on these.
Yes they are cheap, look like any other mouth harp, but you won't get a sound of them.
spend $10 more and get something fantastic.
By R. Register (San Francisco, CA USA)
I hope this helps those having trouble:
My harp was nearly silent no matter how hard I tried to get a nice sound out of it. I played one as a kid so I knew how it was supposed to work and sound.
It turns out that the gap between the prongs was way too wide. I put the harp in a vice and squeezed it down so that the tongue (twanger) had just enough room to vibrate without hitting the arms/prongs (rougly a 1mm gap on either side). Now it sounds really great. If yours is quiet, maybe give this a try before throwing it away - good luck!
By Oscar Stern (Brooklyn, NY United States)
I had a nice jaw harp that eventually broke. Bought one of these as a desperate replacement, big mistake. I wouldn't give this to my worst enemy. The tine (the thing you move to get sound) was unbearably stiff. It was like wrestling with a set of house keys trying to get any kind of sound out of this. You are better off getting a murchunga or a vietnamese jaw harp. They are easy to play, fairly loud and a variety of sweet sounds. You won't believe the difference.
Images Product
Buy Snoopy Jaw Harp Now
0 comments:
Post a Comment