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- Published: 05 Oct 2009
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Name | Accordion |
---|---|
Names | Danish (free-bass): Accordeon. |
Image capt | A piano accordion (top) and a Russian bayan (bottom) |
Background | keyboard |
Hornbostel sachs | 412.132 |
Hornbostel sachs desc | Free-reed aerophone |
Developed | Early 19th century |
Range | Depends on configuration: |
Musicians | Accordionists (list of accordionists). |
Midi | 021/022023/024 (Tango Accordion) |
Articles | Accordion, Chromatic button accordion, Bayan, Diatonic button accordion, Piano accordion, Stradella bass system, Free-bass system, Accordion reed ranks & switches |
It is played by compressing or expanding a bellows whilst pressing buttons or keys, causing valves, called pallets, to open, which allow air to flow across strips of brass or steel, called reeds, that vibrate to produce sound inside the body.
The instrument is sometimes considered a one-man-band as it needs no accompanying instrument. The performer normally plays the melody on buttons or keys on the right-hand manual, and the accompaniment, consisting of bass and pre-set chord buttons, on the left-hand manual.
The accordion is often used in folk music in Europe, North America and South America. It is commonly associated with busking. Some popular music acts also make use of the instrument. Additionally, the accordion is sometimes used in both solo and orchestra performances of classical music.
The oldest name for this group of instruments is actually harmonika, from the Greek harmonikos, meaning harmonic, musical. Today, native versions of the name accordion are more common. These names are a reference to the type of accordion patented by Cyrill Demian, which concerned "automatically coupled chords on the bass side".
The keyboard touch is not expressive and does not affect dynamics: all expression is effected through the bellows: some bellows effects as illustrated below: # Bellows used for volume control/fade # Repeated change of direction ("bellows shake") # Constant bellows motion while applying pressure at intervals # Constant bellows motion to produce clear tones with no resonance # Using the bellows with the silent air button gives the sound of air moving, which is sometimes used in contemporary compositions particularly for this instrument
The size and weight of an accordion varies depending on its type, layout and playing range, which can be as small as to have only one or two rows of basses and a single octave on the right-hand manual, to the standard 120-bass accordion and through to large and heavy 160-bass free-bass converter models.
Inside the accordion are the reeds that generate the instrument tones. These are organized in different sounding ranks, which can be further combined into registers producing differing timbres. All but the smaller accordions are equipped with switches that control which combination of reed ranks will be brought into operation, organized from high to low registers. Each register stop produces a separate sound timbre. See the accordion reed ranks & switches article for further explanation and audio samples.
All but the smallest accordions usually have treble switches. The larger and more expensive accordions often also have bass switches.
Other accordions, such as the diatonic button accordion, have only a single shoulder strap and a right hand thumb strap. All accordions have a (mostly adjustable) leather strap on the left-hand manual to keep the player's hand in position while drawing the bellows. There are also straps above and below the bellows to keep it securely closed when the instrument is not playing.
The accordion's basic form is believed to have been invented in Berlin in 1822 by Christian Friedrich Ludwig Buschmann, although one instrument has been recently discovered that appears to have been built earlier. Engraved Name F. Löhner.
The accordion is one of several European inventions of the early 19th century that used free reeds driven by a bellows. An instrument called accordion was first patented in 1829 by Cyrill Demian, of Armenian descent, in Vienna
Demian's instrument bore little resemblance to modern instruments. It only had a left hand buttonboard, with the right hand simply operating the bellows. One key feature for which Demian sought the patent was the sounding of an entire chord by depressing one key. His instrument also could sound two different chords with the same key; one for each bellows direction (a bisonoric action).
The piano accordion was played in Germany, then all over Europe. It was invented in 1822, but it started to actually be played in 1826, and built its reputation from there. At that time in Vienna, mouth harmonicas with Kanzellen (chambers) had already been available for many years, along with bigger instruments driven by hand bellows. The diatonic key arrangement was also already in use on mouth-blown instruments. Demian's patent thus covered an accompanying instrument: an accordion played with the left hand, opposite to the way that contemporary chromatic hand harmonicas were played, small and light enough for travelers to take with them and used to accompany singing. The patent also described instruments with both bass and treble sections, although Demian preferred the bass-only instrument owing to its cost and weight advantages.
By 1831 at least the accordion had appeared in Britain. The instrument was noted in The Times of that year as one new to British audiences and not favourably reviewed, but nevertheless it soon became popular. It had also become popular with New Yorkers by at least the mid-1840s.
The musician Adolph Müller described a great variety of instruments in his 1833 book, Schule für Accordion. At the time, Vienna and London had a close musical relationship, with musicians often performing in both cities in the same year, so it is possible that Wheatstone was aware of this type of instrument and may have used them to put his key-arrangement ideas into practice.
Jeune's flutina resembles Wheatstone's concertina in internal construction and tone color, but it appears to complement Demian's accordion functionally. The flutina is a one-sided bisonoric melody-only instrument whose keys are operated with the right hand while the bellows is operated with the left. When the two instruments are combined, the result is quite similar to diatonic button accordions still manufactured today.
Further innovations followed and continue to the present. Various buttonboard and keyboard systems have been developed, as well as voicings (the combination of multiple tones at different octaves), with mechanisms to switch between different voices during performance, and different methods of internal construction to improve tone, stability and durability.
Invented in 1829, its popularity spread rapidly: it has mostly been associated with the common people, and was spread by Europeans who emigrated around the world. The accordion in both button and piano forms became a favorite of folk musicians and has been integrated into traditional music styles all over the world: see the list of traditional music styles that incorporate the accordion.
Most Vaudeville theaters closed during the Great Depression, but accordionists during 1930s-1950s taught and performed for radio. During the 1950s through the 1980s the accordion received great exposure on television with performances by Myron Floren on the Lawrence Welk Show. In the late 1950s and early 1960s, the accordion declined in popularity.
John Mellencamp has included the accordion in most of his music since 1987's The Lonesome Jubilee.
In popular music, it is now generally considered exotic and old-fashioned to include the accordion, especially in music for advertisements. Some popular acts do use the instrument in their distinctive sounds. See the list of popular music acts that incorporate the accordion.
In 1981, Nonesuch Records released the Digital LP, The Tango Project, featuring the accordionist Dr. William Schimmel. It became a number 1 hit on the classical music charts and won the Stereo Review Album of the Year Award and Grammy nominations in various categories. It later was released in CD form with two follow up albums, Two to Tango and Music from the Palm Court. The Tango Project later released a CD, White Rabbit, on the Newport Classic label. The Tango Project appears in the movie Scent of a Woman starring Al Pacino, can be heard in the films True Lies, All the Kings Men, Mr. and Mrs. Smith (trailer), HBO Sex and the City, Real Sex as well as Sesame St. The Tango Project is responsible for ushering in the Tango revival in America.
Dr. William Schimmel is also the featured accordionist on Tom Waits Raindogs (Island Records) and also performs on Tom Waits Frank's Wild Years (Island Records) and also was featured in the 1985 production of Frank's Wild Years at the Steppenwolf Theatre in Chicago. Dr. Schimmel also appears with Tom Waits in a recording of the music of Kurt Weill (Lost in the Stars - A+M Records). Schimmel also recorded a remake of As Tears Go By (Mick Jagger/Keith Richards) with Marianne Faithful in 1986 on Island Records. The album title is Strange Weather - the title of a Tom Waits song on the same album.
In 1993, during their MTV Unplugged performance, Nirvana's Krist Novoselic used accordion while covering The Vaselines song Jesus Doesn't Want Me for a Sunbeam.The New York band They Might Be Giants extensively use the accordion in many of their recordings, especially on earlier albums such as Apollo 18.
Perhaps the most famous accordionist in popular music is "Weird Al" Yankovic, who has used the accordion in every album he has recorded, most extensively on his debut album. The accordion also features prominently in the folk metal genre.
Comedienne Judy Tenuta frequently uses an accordion in her act.
Arcade Fire features an accordion in a few of their songs, notably in Wake Up and Neighborhood #2 (Laïka)
Although best known as a folk instrument, it has grown in popularity among classical composers. The earliest surviving concert piece is , written in 1836 by Miss Louise Reisner of Paris. Other composers, including the Russian Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky, the Italian Umberto Giordano, and the American Charles Ives (1915), wrote works for the diatonic button accordion.
The first composer to write specifically for the chromatic accordion was Paul Hindemith. In 1922, the Austrian Alban Berg included an accordion in Wozzeck, Op. 7. Other notable composers have written for the accordion during the first half of the 20th century American composer William P. Perry featured the accordion in his orchestral suite Six Title Themes in Search of a Movie (2008). The experimental composer Howard Skempton began his musical career as an accordionist, and has written numerous solo works for it. Russian Bayan virtuoso Stas Venglevski has premiered contemporary works by Yehuda Yannay, Anthony Galla-Rini and William Susman.
New York's accordionist Dr. William Schimmel performs with The New York Philharmonic, The Metropolitan and New York City Operas, The Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra, The Orchestra of St. Lukes, North South Consonance, The Absolute Ensemble, The New York Chamber Ensemble, The Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center, The Juilliard Ensemble, The Washington Square Chamber Society, The Argento Ensemble, Ensemble Sospeso, Sequitur, has premiered literally hundreds of new works including those of his own composition which include a number of concerti, solo and chamber pieces, Opera, as well as Broadway and off - Broadway scores. He also reconstructed the Andy Arcari Accordion Concerto (1942) and added a new orchestration. He has be actively involved in presenting the accordion to pre-school audiences through The Lincoln Center Meet the Artist Program and The Midori Foundation.
Notably, the Finnish symphonic folk-metal band Turisas has always had a full-time accordionist, employing classical and polka-style sensibilities alongside a violinist. Another Finnish metal band, Korpiklaani, invokes a type of Finnish polka called humppa, and also has a full-time accordionist. Sarah Kiener, the former hurdy-gurdy player for the Swiss melodic-death/folk metal band Eluveitie, played a Helvetic accordion known as a zugerörgeli, which could be a distant relative (in one way or another) to the Swiss schwyzerörgeli, as both are indigenous to and very rare outside of Switzerland.
The lead vocalist for the pirate metal band Alestorm plays a keytar and often uses it to make accordion sounds.
Also, the Keyboardist of the Quebequan folk-Metal band Vinlanders often uses accordion sounds with his keyboard.
The manufacture of an accordion is only a partly automated process. In a sense, all accordions are handmade, since there is always some hand assembly of the small parts required. The general process involves making the individual parts, assembling the subsections, assembling the entire instrument, and final decorating and packaging.
Famous centres of production are the Italian cities of Stradella and Castelfidardo, with many small and medium size manufacturers especially at the latter. Castelfidardo honours the memory of Paolo Soprani who was one the first large-scale producers. Larger scale production existed in Germany by Hohner and Weltmeister, but these lost volume by the end of the 20th century.
Category:German musical instruments Category:Free reed aerophones Category:Keyboard instruments Category:Sets of free reeds Category:Austrian musical instruments Category:Belarusian musical instruments Category:Bosnian musical instruments Category:Brazilian musical instruments Category:Celtic musical instruments Category:Colombian musical instruments Category:Irish musical instruments Category:Lithuanian musical instruments Category:Polish musical instruments Category:Portuguese musical instruments Category:Slovak musical instruments Category:Swiss musical instruments Category:Danish musical instruments Category:San Marinese musical instruments
This text is licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA License. This text was originally published on Wikipedia and was developed by the Wikipedia community.
Name | Nathan Abshire |
---|---|
Background | solo_singer |
Birth name | Nathan Abshire |
Born | June 27, 1913 |
Died | May 13, 1981 |
Origin | Gueydan, Louisiana, United States |
Genre | Cajun music, swamp blues, Louisiana blues |
Occupation | Accordion player |
Years active | 1930s–1981 |
Nathan Abshire (June 27, 1913 near Gueydan, Louisiana – May 13, 1981, Basile, Louisiana) was a Cajun accordion player who, along with Iry LeJeune, was responsible for the renaissance of the accordion in Cajun music in the 1940s.
Abshire first performed on the accordion in public at age eight. He continued playing at dance halls and parties through his teenage years. In the 1930s, he performed with and learned from fiddler Lionel Leleux and accordionist Amédé Ardoin. In 1935, he recorded six songs with the Rayne-Bo Ramblers, a group led by guitarist and singer Leroy "Happy Fats" Leblanc.
Abshire served in the U.S. military during World War II. After the war, he settled in Basile, Louisiana, where he played regularly at the Avalon Club. He released his best-known record, "Pine Grove Blues", in 1949, as well as several recordings on Swallow Records and Arhoolie Records in the 1960s. He appeared with Dewey Balfa and The Balfa Brothers at the Newport Folk Festival in 1967. Along with Balfa, Abshire devoted much of his time in the 1960s and 70s to promoting Cajun music through appearances at festivals, colleges, and schools throughout the United States.
Abshire was featured in Les Blank's 1971 documentary Spend It All and the 1975 PBS documentary, The Good Times Are Killing Me. He was also included in the documentary film, Les Blues de Balfa, along with Balfa.
He died in Basile in 1981.
Category:1913 births Category:1981 deaths Category:Cajun accordion players Category:People from Vermilion Parish, Louisiana Category:Cajun musicians Category:American military personnel of World War II Category:Swamp blues musicians Category:Musicians from Louisiana Category:Louisiana blues musicians
This text is licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA License. This text was originally published on Wikipedia and was developed by the Wikipedia community.