0 a small, rectangular musical instrument, played by blowing and sucking air through it --
1 a small, rectangular musical instrument with spaces along one side that are blown into to play notes, or this type of instrument generally --
He was an amateur of the cornet and ukelele, often accompanying himself with a kazoo, and was a competent harmonica player.
It generates a range of hallucinatory colours, at times like a guitar, a harmonica.
He incorporated his signature call-and-response style of alternating vocal passages with pungent harmonica blasts that became a fundamental of blues harmonica.
Musical performances now include those on the solo saxophone and on that abomination the harmonica, while this very charming form of culture and art for some reason has been overlooked.
They resemble pens, harmonicas, radios or matchboxes, or are shaped like little birds, but those so-called toys explode when they are picked up or stepped upon.
I know that he plays in a band, so perhaps he should confine his blowing to his harmonica.
A substantial number of harmonicas and mouth-organs will, it is hoped, soon be available for distribution to the troops.
This strange clash, of course, belongs to the relationes non harmonica, a contrapuntal phenomenon much discussed and variously evaluated in the music-theoretical literature of the eighteenth century.