Welcome to Harmonica Players.com, a site within HarmonicaLinks.com.
The categories below contain a very complete listing of the Harmonica Players found on the Web with links to their websites. These talented players and groups represent all styles of music from all eras.
Visit the homepages of many of the world's finest chromatic harmonica players. We have also included bass and chord harmonica players on this page. All styles of music are represented here.
You've never heard a band with just harmonicas before? Visit the websites of the world's finest harmonica groups, trios, and bands past and present. The only instruments you will find in these ensembles are harmonicas.
If you have a harmonica-related website and would like it listed here, please email us with the web address, site title (or player's name), brief description, and the page it should be included on. Also, if you find any 'dead' links or have changed the URL to your site, let us know so we can make the update.
To open any of the pages in a new browser window, right-click and select "OPEN LINK IN NEW WINDOW" ("NEW WINDOW WITH THIS LINK" in Netscape). Macintosh users should click and hold on the link until you can select the same option.
Dave explains the value of not just learning a scale up and down, but dividing it into smaller "bite-size" chunks, which can then be used as blues riffs.
Here are Dave Gage's sons, Brody and Alex, now called the Brothers Gage, back when they were 10 and 12 year old kids. This video shot in 2015, is an unedited take playing an improvised blues and country based jam and having a bunch of fun.
One plays rhythm beatbox harmonica while the other takes a solo. They are both playing a standard key of "C" 10-hole diatonic in 2nd Position (which is also known as "Crossharp"). They both learned to play harmonica around age 5 and now also sing, play guitar, bass, drums, and keyboards. The key to getting good is consistency. They still practice every single day.