An inexpensive 10 hole Hohner harmonica is a fun and easy way to learn a bit about music and self expression. when I was 10 my parents got me a book by Klutz Press, "Country and Blues Harmonica for the Musically Hopeless" that came with a cheap plastic Hohner harp and a cassette tape where the author Jon Gindick walks you through everything you need to know to get started on straight and cross harp. The whole tape is now on YouTube!
The hardest skill to master on a harmonica is playing one note at a time without bleeding into the holes on either side. Once you master single hole pucker, introducing the side holes adds more texture and harmony at your discretion. The second hardest skill is "bending" by changing your embouchure and air stream flow to bend the pitch of the reed. You can't really effectively bend until you single note pucker since the reeds bend at different rates which only sounds good when you've mastered both skills which are key to a good cross harp player.
If you decide to get a harp for starters the plastic Hohner Marine Band harp is super tough and forgiving. The more expensive wooden comb blues harps sound amazing but they take some skill to master.
Diatonic harmonicas are keyed, where the "C" note (4th hole blow) can be in any whole tone, so some transpositional thinking is required once you get good. If you want to play cross harp (aka "blues") with a guitar player typically playing in the key of E, then get a harp keyed in A.
I've actually been picking up the harp again, after decades of not doing it, since my college roommate is into it and I'm seeing him in a few weeks.
That "single-note pucker" is something I never even thought about. I use tongue-blocking, and I can still bend a note. I should note here that, at the time, I didn't even know there WAS another way to get a single note, so that's what I did.
I'm not saying you're wrong. I'll just note that he says he can't quite master bending, and he's doing the pucker.
Yall ever listen to zydeco? Can I take you on a lil journey real fast? If you're into harmonicas, and you like that blues sound, zydeco is a danceable higher paced style of music i'd love to share with you. Harmonica gets my toes tappin and two steppin in no time.
There are photos of Bob Dylan dipping his harmonica in a glass of (supposedly) whiskey before playing. I've always heard that it would make the wooden comb in the old Marine Band swell which made it airtight and produced a better sound.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2fayFSiceZA
The hardest skill to master on a harmonica is playing one note at a time without bleeding into the holes on either side. Once you master single hole pucker, introducing the side holes adds more texture and harmony at your discretion. The second hardest skill is "bending" by changing your embouchure and air stream flow to bend the pitch of the reed. You can't really effectively bend until you single note pucker since the reeds bend at different rates which only sounds good when you've mastered both skills which are key to a good cross harp player.
If you decide to get a harp for starters the plastic Hohner Marine Band harp is super tough and forgiving. The more expensive wooden comb blues harps sound amazing but they take some skill to master.
Diatonic harmonicas are keyed, where the "C" note (4th hole blow) can be in any whole tone, so some transpositional thinking is required once you get good. If you want to play cross harp (aka "blues") with a guitar player typically playing in the key of E, then get a harp keyed in A.