It's not very active, but there's a
Harp Amp Forum over on AMPAGE. Bruce Collins of Mission Amps was working on a harp amp design not too long ago.
The "Normal" channel
HERE was designed for harp when the "Bright" switch is off (bigger cathode bypass caps and only partial bypass of 2nd gain stage).
You need more mids than a guitar amp, and feedback is a big concern. That's the reason for lower gain.
As noted in the thread linked to above, lower preamp plate voltages help a lot. A good starting point would be 12AX7 plate voltages of 150-180 or so. Power rail node had 260-300 on it for this amp. Even lower might be better for that greasy harp tone.
You also need to know what kind of mic the guy is using. Some mics are fine with the typical 1 meg input impedance (hope that's the right term) of a guitar amp, but other mics may want to "see" as little as 100K. That's why the input jacks are wired strangely. The Lo jack has a 50% signal cut PLUS only 100K going to ground.
Also, harp amps tend to stay away from long-tailed phase inverters. Concertina & cathodyne seem to be more popular, maybe because they're seen as being more Lo-Fi?
Oh, I left out couplig caps - bigger than guitar.
I'm no expert on this subject - just did a lot of research for this one build. The harp-playing son of the owner really likes it though.
Cheers,
Chip