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Long Beards & Spurs
Try not to laugh
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<blockquote data-quote="REN" data-source="post: 5309571" data-attributes="member: 4849"><p>hahah. It took me a good 2 weeks years ago when I first tried one to get it even close to a turkey sound. </p><p></p><p>main issue people dont do right when first trying them is they dont put it far enough back in the roof of their mouth (gag reflex for some) and they dont apply decent pressure with their tongue. </p><p></p><p>Put it as far back on the roof as you can and use the main part of your tongue to rest on the back of the frame of the call. then the front part of your tongue to let air in and out. I recommend anyone new to it to try and get a 2 reed at most to start with, those are the easiest to learn on then you can move to a 3 or 3.5 reed. Stay away from "cutter" type designs in the beginning and just get batwings or ghost cuts initally (or the standard 2 slit edge 2 reeds)</p><p></p><p>then just work on rolling out "yuck, yuck,yuck" sounds with 2 notes. As with anything hard to do it gets easier with practice, then you can move around to different cut designs to find the ones you really like.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="REN, post: 5309571, member: 4849"] hahah. It took me a good 2 weeks years ago when I first tried one to get it even close to a turkey sound. main issue people dont do right when first trying them is they dont put it far enough back in the roof of their mouth (gag reflex for some) and they dont apply decent pressure with their tongue. Put it as far back on the roof as you can and use the main part of your tongue to rest on the back of the frame of the call. then the front part of your tongue to let air in and out. I recommend anyone new to it to try and get a 2 reed at most to start with, those are the easiest to learn on then you can move to a 3 or 3.5 reed. Stay away from "cutter" type designs in the beginning and just get batwings or ghost cuts initally (or the standard 2 slit edge 2 reeds) then just work on rolling out "yuck, yuck,yuck" sounds with 2 notes. As with anything hard to do it gets easier with practice, then you can move around to different cut designs to find the ones you really like. [/QUOTE]
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