The Key of the Song is F. But to play F cross harp you need a B-flat harmonica. Not the A harmonica as previously suggested. That would be used to play songs in the key of E.
At first it sounds like regular old 2nd position blues cross harp (B flat harp), but it really needs an F note and A note to play together within the solos (not F & B flat), so it’s played straight harp (an F harp - the actual key of the song). Great use of percussion and mouth/hand effects by the harp player to make an awesome solo from the limited notes to work with.
In my opinion and in Musical History, The Harmonica has always been used to accompany the acoustic guitar
Minority
Yes, very often. In Like a Rolling Stone and many more of his songs he used a C harmonica.
Hohner Special 20 KEY OF E
Yes it is still used today by elderly people.
The surname may be spelled Cochrane or Cochran.(The term cochrane is used fictionally in the Star Trek series as a unit of subspace distortion.)
Tom CochraneThe song "Life Is a Highway" was originally written and performed by Tom Cochrane. It was on his 1991 album "Mad Mad World". The song was a #1 hit in Cochrane's native Canada and peaked at #6 on the U.S. Billboard charts in 1992. But back in the 70's The J Giels band did record this song, But i can't find it on the internet. I have in album form somewhere
harmonica
Early Blues musicians used a combination of harmonica and guitar.
In my opinion and in Musical History, The Harmonica has always been used to accompany the acoustic guitar
honer
Minority
Yes, very often. In Like a Rolling Stone and many more of his songs he used a C harmonica.
* Harmonica * drum s * shakes and tambourines * scrapers * string instruments
The original instruments used in blues were the guitar and the harmonica
Hohner Special 20 KEY OF E
the good kind GIBSON haha i think ^ The above comment is not totally accurate ^. He used a Gibson for a very small period but he predominantly always used a Martin & Co guitar throughout his life like the D-35 model