A little bit of swing
Just for the pleasure of listening to the beautiful song “Écoute ta maman” and enjoying the talent of the french singer and harmonica player : our dear Beija Jeanzac!
Just for the pleasure of listening to the beautiful song “Écoute ta maman” and enjoying the talent of the french singer and harmonica player : our dear Beija Jeanzac!
Hi there! 🤚 As you might know, Yonberg is the first and unique world manufacturer of diatonic harmonicas equipped with reed-plates and reeds of 100% TITANIUM. Of course, our range also includes harmonicas with reed-plates and reeds made of stainless steel. Yonberg’s instruments are well-known for their innovative ergonomics as well as for their…
Beija Jeanzac performs Frank Sinatra’s “Sweet Lorraine” with a gentle touch.
Learn how to play the famous Christmas tune “Douce Nuit” with Beija Jeanzac.
Our talented Stéphane Laidet reinterprets Frédéric Chopin’s “Valse de l’adieu”. A tune he is particularly sensitive to, since his grandmother played it on the piano for her grandchildren.
Our dear artist, Beija Jeanzac, shows you in this video how to maintain and clean your Yonberg diatonic harmonica. It’s super simple and fast, and it allows you to keep your instrument in excellent condition and significantly extend its lifetime.
A new harmonica player joins our artists team! His name is Livio Careddu and heplays harmonica with the group “L’Art Scène”, which is an electro-acoustic formation which offers guitar/harmonica compositions and road-style covers. He is also the creator of the microphone named the “Black Bullet” which was designed especially for harmonica players. Let’s discover his…
Talent, freshness and a touch of madness for this young Franco-Italian musician! Francesco Il Mercante, who comes from Milan, is a musician whose artistic singularity leaves no one indifferent. Harmonicist since the very beginning of his musical career, he has honored his Yonberg instrument in his latest music video, from his album l’émi-ingrat. Let’s discover…
The diatonic harmonica, even if it can be played chromatically too, supposes the use of 12 harmonicas. This is why the use of music sheet is very tedious and a source of multiple errors. Everyone commonly uses tabs, but tabs do not include the rhythmic notation. Half of the music information is missing. Stéphane Laidet imagined for you…
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