For more than a century, the Hohner harmonica has set the standard for the diatonic blues harp. Yet even among the classics there are noticeable differences: the Marine Band, Special 20 and Golden Melody sound, play and feel distinct – even though all three have ten holes and are built for blues, folk and rock.
This article puts the three models side by side and explains the real differences: a wooden or plastic comb, the tuning, and how each one plays. By the end you'll know which Hohner harmonica suits your style. To get started, all three are the right choice in the standard key of C.
01Marine Band – the classic since 1896
The Hohner Mundharmonika Marine Band Classic is the grandfather of the blues harp, essentially unchanged since 1896. Its signature is the wooden comb (pearwood): it gives the tone that warm, woody core character that many blues and folk players deliberately seek out. The body is held together with the classic nails.
The Marine Band defines the traditional sound – the harp heard on countless blues recordings. If you want that authentic, slightly rawer character and value the traditional feel of a wooden comb, this is the one.

02Special 20 – the modern comfort standard
The Hohner Mundharmonika Spezial 20 takes the sound of the Marine Band and puts it into a plastic comb. That brings two practical benefits: the holes are rounded at the front, so the lips glide more easily across the instrument – more comfortable for long sessions and for beginners. And unlike wood, the plastic comb doesn't swell when it gets damp.
Tonally the Special 20 sits very close to the Marine Band and uses the same balanced tuning that works both solo and alongside other instruments. For many players it is today's first choice as an all-round blues harp – comfortable, durable and versatile.

03Golden Melody – ideal for melody and single notes
The Hohner Golden Melody Mundharmonika Nr. 2416 stands apart – in the best way. It is the only one here tuned to equal temperament. That means single notes and melodies sound especially clean and stay in tune across all keys. The trade-off is that chords sound a little rougher than with the compromise tuning of the Marine Band and Special 20.
That makes the Golden Melody the pick for players who put melodies and single notes first – think folk, pop or clean single-note playing – rather than chord-heavy blues backing. Its ergonomic plastic body also sits comfortably in the hand.

04The three models at a glance
All three are ten-hole diatonic harmonicas in Richter tuning, available in C as the beginner choice. The difference lies in the comb, the tuning and how they play:
| Model | Comb | Tuning | Feel | Ideal for | Price (in C) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Marine Band Classic | Wood | compromise | traditional, warm | authentic blues, folk | from ~€34 |
| Special 20 | Plastic | compromise | comfortable, rounded | all-round, beginner | from ~€34 |
| Golden Melody | Plastic | equal temperament | ergonomic | melody, single notes | from ~€80 |
05What about the more affordable entry models?
Alongside the three classics, Hohner offers two popular siblings at a lower entry price. The Hohner Mundharmonika Big River Harp delivers the blues-harp sound with a plastic comb at a smaller price and makes a solid first harp. The Hohner Mundharmonika Blues Harp, with its wooden comb, sits tonally close to the Marine Band family.
Which Hohner harmonica you choose in the end comes down to your playing style – you'll find the full selection in our Mundharmonikas category.


In short: the Marine Band is the traditional wooden classic, the Special 20 the comfortable all-rounder for beginners and frequent players, and the Golden Melody the specialist for clean melodic playing. All three are a good start in C.
Frequently asked questions
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What is the Golden Melody better suited for?
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