Another useful feature of the retuned slider notes is they give you enharmonics : same-note alternatives for the scale tones. This can be very useful in tricky passages to reduce the amount of jumping around to get wider intervals: simply choose the slide-in option for the same note instead.
Here are some of my albums where you can hear the Slide-Diatonic in action:
If you want to learn to play Irish trad tunes using the Slide-Diatonic, I recommend you check out my instructional books “Play Irish Music on the Chromatic Harmonica”. Although they are for standard chromatics, the tunes will play even better on the Slide-Diatonic! I recommend the G/D book for playing in the correct keys:
Play Irish Music on the Chromatic Harmonica: Key G/D Play Irish Music on the Chromatic Harmonica: Key C
Because it's half-valved, the SlideDiatonic can also be played fully chromatically using draw bends. Check the Tuning Chart below; you will see that all the missing notes in the scale are available from a bend on the slide-out or slide-in draw note:
The Slide-Diatonic has something of a split personality! You can play it in the home key and related modes as intended, with the slider button giving you pleasingly in-tune decorations. However, after awhile I discovered a cool unintended consequence of the tuning… If you hold the slider in, you get a kind of mirror-image harp that sounds quite different! In the key of C, with slide-out your main notes are blow CEGC. But with slide-in, you have those same notes as draw CEGC. All of these notes can be bent with draw bending, giving you a very bluesy sound! It's very similar to the bottom octave scale of a typical diatonic harp, so will feel quite familiar for any of you who're used to playing blues harp using bending. It's a nice 'hidden feature' that will definitely appeal to some 😊
Please order the standard harp and then contact André Coelho - andregodoycoelho@gmail.com to arrange your custom options.