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An accordion is a small portable free-reed wind
instrument with a keyboard, the smallest representative of the organ
family.
My accordions
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My accordion - Borsini Superstar |
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The History
| Sound is made by a thin metal ribbon, a reed, that is
held at one end and free at the other, like a ruler on the edge of a
table top. The reed is fitted inside a holder plate, air is drawn
through the hole in the holder, the reed vibrates, producing sound. |
The Sheng |
The first free-reed instrument was the Chinese Sheng,
which is mouth-blown. The Cheng plays by blowing air into the wooden
mouthpiece that attaches to a gourd and into which are fitted various
amounts of bamboo shoots of different lengths. It was invented as an
imitation of the Phoenix bird. The approximate date that this instrument
was created is unknown, but it is believed to be more then 2,000 years
old. It is thought that a traveler to China in the 1800s brought this
idea back to Europe.
Bellows are used on the accordion to substitute
blowing air by the mouth. This allows strong air pressure and conserves
the musician's energy. Greeks and Egyptians first used bellows before
1500 B.C to heat up furnaces in forges. Although portable bellow-like
organs have been found in dated pictures, the person who came up with
the idea to attach the bellows to the accordion remains a mystery. In order to allow the player to support and stroll with the
accordion, straps were eventually mounted on the body.
The first basic accordion was invented in 1822 by
Friedrich Buschmann in Berlin. The first modern accordion was a
10-button accordion, invented in 1829 by Cyrillus Damian, in Vienna,
which had the 7 notes of a major scale, and consequently only played in
one key [and its related keys]. These accordions are still played today
and are called many things, Cajun accordions, melodeons, one-row,
diatonic accordions, and so on. They are single-action instruments (bi-sonoric),
where as a rule each button produces two different notes, one when
pulling the bellows outwards, one when pushing it inwards. The notes are
arranged much like on a harmonica.

A diatonic accordion
The accordion was patented on January 14, 1854 by
Anthony Faas.
The accordion consists of folded bellows, to which is
attached a keyboard with from 5 to 50 keys. The keys on being depressed,
while the bellows are being worked, open valves admitting the wind to
free reeds, consisting of narrow tongues of metal riveted some to the
upper, some to the lower board of the bellows, having their free ends
bent, some inwards, some outwards. Each key produces two notes, one from
the inwardly bent reed when the bellows are compressed, the other from
the outwardly bent reed by suction when the bellows are expanded. The
pitch of the note is determined by the length and thickness of the
reeds.Generally the longer the reed, the lower the tone, although some
reeds have added weights which lower the tone of a shorter reed. . The
right hand plays the melody on the keyboard, while the left works the
bellows and manipulates the two or three bass harmony keys, which sound
the simple chords of the tonic and dominant.
Related instruments include the
concertina and the
melodeon.

The piano accordion was developed in Europe in the
late 1800's and has become the most common type of accordion nowadays in
most western countries. Familiar to everyone who has ever seen Lawrence
Welk, the right hand is laid out like a piano keyboard, so a piano
player could play it, though the keys are smaller than on a piano. The
left hand plays an array of up to 120 buttons which play bass notes and
various chords. The instrument was named and popularized in the United
States by Count Guido Deiro who was the first piano accordionist to
perform in Vaudeville. He is credited with making the first recordings
of the instrument in 1908, also with making the first radio broadcast of
the accordion in 1921 and the first sound motion picture featuring the
accordion, for Vitaphone in 1928.
The left hand layout of a piano and chromatic button
accordion uses "The Stradella Bass System". This usually features six
rows: the second row buttons are called the Fundamental Bass and are
ordered in quints, the first row buttons are called the Counter Bass and
are major 3rd higher, relative to the second row. The major chords are
in the third row, the fourth row consists of the minor chords, the fifth
row houses the seventh chord and finally the sixth row has the
diminished seventh chords. Most 7ths and diminished chords consist of
only 3 notes – the 5th is omitted for various reasons.
Depending on the price, size or origin of the
instrument, some rows may miss completely or the layout is slightly
changed. Common configurations are:
- "12 Bass" accordion: Fundamental Bass goes from
Bb to A (the third to eighth column in the picture above), and only
has Fundamental Bass and major chords
- "24 Bass" goes from Ab to A, and has Fundamental
Bass, major and minor chords
- "32 Bass" goes from Eb to E, and has FB, major,
minor and seventh chords
- "48 Bass" goes from Eb to E, and has all six rows
- "72 Bass" goes from Db to F#, and has all six
rows
- "80 Bass" goes from Cb to G#, and has everything
except diminished
- "96 Bass" is as 80 Bass, but with all six rows
- "120 Bass" goes from Abb (i.e. low G) to A# -
that's 20 columns - with all six rows.

C - System
Another type is the chromatic accordion. Usually these
have buttons instead of piano keys, but they have the same 12-note
Western scale as a piano accordion. The buttons are ordered
chromatically in three rows, one row up/down means one halftone up/down,
one button up/down in the same row means 3 halftones up/down. Larger
chromatic accordions can have up to three auxiliary rows, with secondary
buttons playing the same tones that already appeared in the first three
rows. This layout makes transforming songs into other keys much easier
than on the piano accordion. The chromatic accordion is definitely the
choice for classical music, as a lot of more buttons than piano keys can
be packed on the same space. Therefore artists can play intervals of up
to two octaves using only one hand, this is especially important for
pieces that include more than two voices. There are two different layout
systems, the C layout and the B layout. If you turned a C layout
keyboard on its head you would have a B layout and vice versa. The B
system is preferred for classical music, and is very common in Eastern
Europe whereas the C system is common in Western Europe, particularly in
France. In Russia and several other countries the B system chromatic
accordion is called a BAYAN.

B - System
Piano accordions and chromatic accordions are
double-action (uni-sonoric) instruments: each key or button plays the
same note or chord, whether the bellows are being pulled out or pushed
in.
Free bass, Bariton bass or Melody bass accordions,
favored by classical accordionists, have a left-hand button board with
individual bass notes over several octaves, rather than the single
octave of bass notes and the preset chords provided by the traditional
"stradella" left-hand button system and works exactly the same way the
right hand on the chromatic accordion does. There are "converter"
accordions offering both systems in one instrument, and the so-called
Bassetti bass instrument (now fairly rare) has three extra rows of free
bass buttons in addition to the 120 Stradella.
Many folk cultures have their own version of an
accordion, including the Russian bayan, Alpine helikon instruments,
North Mexican conjunto accordion, the bandoneon, Louisiana Cajun
accordion, Irish 2 row b-c type instruments, Russian Garmon' and others.
These can have either a unique note layout, a different sound, or all of
the above.
One company in particular managed to establish itself
in the industry hierarchy. It is commonly accepted that Matthias Hohner
was to the accordion what Henry Ford was to the automobile, and
enterprising figure who made his product available to a great number of
people at reasonable prices. Originally a clockmaker in Trossingen,
Germany, Hohner had begun building accordions at his workshop in 1857,
but by roughly 20 years after his death the business he had founded was
creating them by mass production.
In Italy the accordion appeared for the first time in
1863. A pilgrim passing through the territory of Castelfidardo on his
pilgrimage to the Sanctuary of the "Black Madonna" of Loreto, stopped by
chance in Antonio Soprani's farmhouse.
He was carrying a rudimentary music box with him; The
Accordion, a queer object arousing the curiosity of Paolo Soprani,
Antonio's eldest son, Young Paolo opened the instrument, disassembled it
and immediately perceived the possibility to build other similar items.
The accordion was given to him as a present, and the ex-farmer soon
successfully opened a small handicraft laboratory and sold the
aesthetically and musically improved product mainly in nearby Loreto,
the destination of a continuous, considerable flow of pilgrims.
So was born, between history and legend, the Italian
accordion industry. Thirteen years later, in 1876, at Stradella near
Pavia, Mariano Dallape, also started to produce considerable quantities
of accordions, made in view of the curiosity aroused by Damian's
Accordion in Tirol. Dallape is often credited with the invention of the
Stradella bass system, but there is some doubt about this.
Soprani and Dallape did not know each other and never
met, but they both had the same intuition as far as the development of
the musical instrument is concerned; first improving the Viennese
patent, succeeded in making the instrument known in all areas of the
country; the second prepared the way for the modern accordion by
applying basic innovations.
From these two centers of development, but especially
from Castelfidardo, the construction of the accordion expanded very
quickly, also thanks to the large number of craftsmen who first worked
in the two pioneers' laboratories and then started production on their
own.
During the first years of this century the accordion
became better known all over the world. In Western Europe, Russia and in
the Americas the accordion was already known but it was the Italian
immigrants that have been the real propagators of the accordion; very
often those immigrants trying to find a job, especially in the Americas,
brought the accordion with them, to make them feel nearer to their
homes, to their families and to their far away native country when
listening to its music.
The early 1950’s was undoubtedly the golden era of the
accordion. As a matter of fact, the instruments exported from Italy
totaled 200,000 pieces a year, and the same quantity was exported from
Germany. During recent years the development of electronics has had its
influence also on our popular instrument Felice Fugazza, a music
composer and teacher at the Bologna Conservatory was the first to
introduce transistors into the accordion in 1960.
Today the instrument has fans all over the world and
it has earned the right of entry into universities and conservatories
throughout Europe, China, Russia and South America. Unfortunately in
North America the accordion's appeal has declined and the University of
Missouri-Kansas City is the only accordion programs in the U.S. where
music majors may use the accordion to earn Baccalaureate through
Doctorate degrees.

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