FAQ
Common questions
Which key should I buy my first harmonica in?
C, without question. Every beginner tutorial, tab chart, and method book is written for a C harmonica. Any other key makes learning harder for no reason. Get C first, then add other keys once you're playing with other musicians who need a specific key.
What's the difference between diatonic and chromatic harmonicas?
Diatonic plays the notes of one key and is the instrument used in blues, folk, rock, and country (the harmonica you're picturing). Chromatic has a side button that adds the sharps and flats for all 12 notes, used in jazz and classical. Start diatonic. Almost everyone should stay diatonic.
How long until I can play a real song?
One afternoon for a simple melody. A week for something that sounds good to outside ears. A month for blues with bends that impress non-players. Harmonica has one of the fastest beginner payoff curves of any instrument.
Can I teach myself harmonica?
Yes, more effectively than almost any other instrument. JP Allen and Adam Gussow have hundreds of hours of free YouTube lessons between them. A method book adds structure, but the self-teaching resources for harmonica are genuinely excellent.
What's the best harmonica brand for a complete beginner?
Hohner. The Special 20 is the instructor's default at $35. Lee Oskar is the next step: more airtight, replaceable reed plates, preferred by working musicians. Seydel makes the finest harmonicas available but costs 2–3x more. For a first instrument, buy Hohner.
Is harmonica hard on the lungs?
No. It's one of the gentlest wind instruments. You're moving small columns of air through tiny reeds, not filling a saxophone bell. Some players find it mildly taxing at first, but that adapts within a week of regular playing.