Advanced Jaw Harp Tutorial. Combining hillbilly breathing, backwoods beatboxing, and muting.

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  • Опубліковано 19 жов 2024
  • Learn to play the jaw harp. Today we will be muting, breathing open close glottis, and a bit of something else. Jaw harp played in this video is by Dubrovsky.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 8

  • @robertsvoboda3508
    @robertsvoboda3508 10 місяців тому +1

    Even without the jaw harp that is a sick beat! Sounds like legit beatboxing! Nice! 😄😎🙌👑🔥

  • @Gegres
    @Gegres Рік тому +3

    Круто повторил получилось благодарю ты красавчик

  • @jimferry6539
    @jimferry6539 2 роки тому +6

    I’m just here researching jaw harps after watching people find them metal detecting, can you give an example of how they might of been played in the past and what style of music ?

    • @bebbcorpharpery7331
      @bebbcorpharpery7331  2 роки тому +9

      Found in cultures and. countries all round the world in different names, sounds and construction methods. Far too numerous to list in a comment here. Also used in the past and present for journey work and inducing trances. Quite effective at it too when you get the breathing down. Think like the diversity of names and flavors of cheeses and their uses.

    • @jimferry6539
      @jimferry6539 2 роки тому +2

      @@bebbcorpharpery7331 it’s such a fascinating instrument musically, culturally and historically. Oh and yeah I realise that now, I didn’t know how much they had been used until I watched that ted talks video, I thought they was just local to me (northwest England)
      Some of the ones my detecting people have found can be from the Bronze Age Roman age and the Saxon period

    • @bebbcorpharpery7331
      @bebbcorpharpery7331  2 роки тому +5

      Even farther back in Asia and no one even knows how far the Susap from Papua New Guinea goes back.

    • @jimferry6539
      @jimferry6539 2 роки тому +2

      @@bebbcorpharpery7331 you know something, after spending just a few hours looking into these jaw harps and their history it’s absolutely mind blowing, I realise how overlooked they are to historians, they could seriously rewrite what we know of history l, just by the fact they are found amongst so many cultures throughout history, cultures we previously believed had no connection or no common history. I’m even more interested in them now. And hey I dunno if it’s just me do you not get the feeling that they sound familiar? I’m not really sure if that’s something that could be past down like by heritage but there seems to be something familiar about the sound they make, even though I’d not heard one played until recently.
      Actually having said they do you know why they’re not appreciated more by historians and people generally?

    • @bebbcorpharpery7331
      @bebbcorpharpery7331  2 роки тому +5

      You have heard them in sound effects for springs and bounces in cartoons and children’s programs. Their is also something very primitive, also futuristic and otherworldly about them. Ancient music is in our bones.