DIDJ NUMBER - 704
This didgeridoo has fantastic overblowns. I used to play didge in a noisy rock band and I really counted on overblowns to give me those aggressive accents without having to jump to a trumpet. That alone makes it exciting to play. You can see that with the first trumpet coming in under an octave that this is the kind of swervy instrument that allows everything to happen with the slightest input from the player, which is a quality that makes you feel way more competent and sound way better than you actually are, but that's okay, because anyone listening will be equally tricked. The heavy dense walls of Madrone give it perfect tonal support so it never sounds frail or wispy. Higher tunings can start sounding like mosquitoes but this is more like proper Alaskan mosquitoes, the kind that land on your shoulder and break your back. Super easy to start up a soft drone. Of the instruments in this update this is the one I'd coach a new player with. Of course it's fantastic for players of all levels. It's just that everything with this is so easy. 10 pounds.
DIDJ # -
704
WOOD TYPE -
Madrone
KEY -
F
TRUMPET -
E, B, F
LENGTH -
66
MOUTHPIECE -
I.D. - 1 3/16
O.D. - 1 3/4
BELL -
6
PRICE -
$650










