Accordion

Accordion

Infobox Instrument
name=Accordion
names=Accordeon (Danish, for free-bass models), Akkordeon (German), Accordéon (French), Bajan (Russian), Fisarmonica (Italian), Harmonijka (Polish), Harmonika (Danish (for standard bass modelsDyremose, Jeanette & Lars, "Det levende bælgspil" (2003), p.132 - Origin of the instrument's name and native names in Danish, French, German, Italian and Russian.] ), Hungarian, Icelandic)



classification=Free-reed aerophone
range=Depends on configuraton:

Right-hand manual
* Chromatic button accordion
* Diatonic button accordion
* Piano accordion

Left-hand manual
*Stradella bass system
*Free-bass system
related=Hand-pumped:
Bandoneón, Concertina, Flutina, Garmon, Trikitixa, Indian harmonium

Foot-pumped:
Harmonium, Reed organ

Mouth-blown:
Melodica, Harmonica, Laotian Khene, Chinese Shêng, Japanese Shō

Electronic reedless instruments:
Electronium, MIDI accordion, Roland Virtual Accordion

Combination acoustic/electronic instruments:
Cordavox, Duovox

musicians=Accordionists (list of accordionists).
builders=
articles=Accordion, Chromatic button accordion, Bayan, Diatonic button accordion, Piano accordion, Stradella bass system, Free-bass system, Accordion reed ranks & switches

The accordion is a portable box-shaped musical instrument of the hand-held bellows-driven free-reed aerophone family, sometimes referred to as a squeezebox. A person who plays the accordion is called an "accordionist". It is played by compressing or expanding its bellows, while 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. [To see the accordion's place among the families of musical instruments, see Henry Doktorski's [http://www.ksanti.net/free-reed/description/taxonomy.html "Taxonomy of Musical Instruments" (The Classical Free-Reed, Inc.)] . Also on this page is Diarmuid Pigott's "The Free-Reed Family of Aerophones."]

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.

It is often used in folk music in Europe, North America, Russia, 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". It comes as a mixture of "aer", "monos" and "cassa", the first two words being Greek and the last Italian. They mean "air", "unit" and "box", describing the instrument...] . Today, native versions of the name "accordion" are more often used, which is a reference to the type of accordion patented by Cyrill Demian, which concerned "automatically coupled chords on the bass side" [Dyremose, Jeanette & Lars, "Det levende bælgspil" (2003), p.133] .

Construction

Accordions are made in a large number of different configurations and types; there is not yet one "standard" accordion. As such, what may be technically possible to do with one accordion could be impossible with another:

* Some accordions are "bisonoric", meaning they produce different pitches depending on the direction of bellows movement.
* Others are "unisonoric" and produce the same pitch regardless of the direction of bellows movement.
* Some accordions use a chromatic buttonboard for the right-hand manual.
* Others use a diatonic buttonboard for the right-hand manual.
* Yet others simply use a piano-style musical keyboard for the right-hand manual.
* Some accordions are capable of playing in different registers than others.
* Additionally, different accordion craftsmen and technicians may tune the same registers in a slightly different manner, essentially 'personalizing' the end result, such as an organ technician might voice a particular instrument.

As such, the boundaries of what defines an accordion are perceivably broad.

Universal components

Body

The accordion's body consists of two wood boxes joined together by a bellows, respectively housing reed chambers for the right- and left-hand manuals. Each side has grilles in order to facilitate the transmission of air in and out of the instrument, and to allow the sound to better project. The grille for the right-hand manual is usually larger and is often shaped for decorative purposes. The right-hand manual is normally used for playing the melody and the left-hand manual for playing the accompaniment, however skilled players can reverse these roles. [ Guido Deiro claimed to be the first accordionist to play a solo with the left hand: "Sharpshooter's March" (1908). See Guido Deiro, "Guido Deiro's Own Story of Sharpshooters March," "The Pietro Musicordion", Volume 6, Number 2 (May-June 1948).]

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 two rows of basses and a single octave on the right-hand manual, for children, to the standard 120 bass accordion and through to large and heavy 160 bass button free-bass converter models.

Bellows

Listen
filename=AccordionBellowsSounds.ogg
title=Accordion bellows sounds
description=A sample of effects that can be achieved with the bellows. [Effects in order: 1. Bellows used for volume control/fade, 2. Repeated change of direction ("bellows shake"), 3. Constant bellows motion while applying pressure at intervals, 4. Constant bellows motion to produce clear tones with no resonance, 5. 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.] - 949 KB.
format=Ogg

Between the right- and left-hand manuals is a bellows, which is made from pleated layers of cloth and cardboard, with added leather and metal. [ [http://1accordion.net/bellows.htm How To Repair Bellows] ] It is used to create pressure and vacuum, driving air across the internal reeds and producing sound by their vibration, applied pressure increasing the volume. Similar to a violin's bow, the production of sound in an accordion is in direct proportion to the motion of the player. This makes the bellows the primary means of articulation.

Button mechanism

Considering that the accordion is an aerophone, the manual mechanism of the instrument is one that switches between either opening up to the air flow, or disabling it. Exactly how this works is illustrated below [Illustration made with reference from a similar illustration that can be found in both "Det levende bælgspil" (p. 9) by Jeanette & Lars Dyremose (2003), and "Harmonikaens historie" (p. 35a) by Bjarne Glenstrup (1972, The University of Copenhagen, Faculty of Music).] :

Variable components

Right-hand manual systems

Different systems exist for the right-hand manual of an accordion, which is normally used for playing the melody. Some use a button layout arranged in one way or another, others use a piano-style keyboard. Each system has different claimed benefitsDan Lindgren, Piano Accordion vs. Chromatic Button Accordion [http://home.swipnet.se/nydana/accordiontest.pdf Online PDF] ] by those who prefer it. They are also used to define one accordion or another as a different "type":

* Chromatic button accordions and the bayan, a Russian variant, use a buttonboard where notes are arranged chromatically. Two of these systems exist.
* Diatonic button accordions use a buttonboard limited to the notes of diatonic scales in a small number of keys.
* Piano accordions use a musical keyboard similar to a piano, going vertically down the side, pointing inward toward the bellows.

Left-hand manual systems

Different systems are also in use for the left-hand manual, which is normally used for playing the accompaniment. These almost always use distinct bass buttons and often have concave buttons to help the player navigate the layout despite not being able to see the buttons while playing. Here, there are two general categories:

* The Stradella bass system, also called "standard bass", which is arranged in a circle of fifths and uses single buttons for chords.
* Various free-bass systems for greater access to playing melodies on the left-hand manual and to forming ones own chords. These are often chosen for playing classical music.

Reed ranks & switches

Inside the accordion are the reeds that generate the instrument tones. These are organized in different sounding "ranks", which can be further combined into producing differing timbres. All but the smaller accordions are equipped with switches that control which combination of reed ranks can be brought into operation, organized from high to low registers. Each register stop enables different sound timbres. See the accordion reed ranks & switches article for further explanation and audio samples.

All but the very small accordions usually have treble switches; the larger and more expensive accordions often also have bass switches.

Straps

The larger piano and chromatic button accordions are usually heavier than other smaller squeezeboxes, and are equipped with two shoulder straps to make it easier to balance the weight and increase bellows control while sitting, and avoid dropping the instrument while standing. Other accordions, such as the diatonic button accordion, have only a single shoulder strap and a right hand thumb strap. All accordions have a leather strap (mostly adjustable) 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.

Unusual accordions

Various hybrid accordions have been created between instruments of different buttonboards and actions. Many remain curiosities, only a few have remained in use. For example:
*The Schrammel accordion, used in Viennese chamber music and Klezmer, which has the treble buttonboard of a chromatic button accordion and a bisonoric bass buttonboard, similar to an expanded diatonic button accordion.
*The schwyzerörgeli or Swiss organ, which has a (usually) 3-row diatonic treble and 18 unisonoric bass buttons in a bass/chord arrangement (actually a subset of the Stradella system), that travel parallel to the bellows motion.
*The Trikitixa of the Basque people has a 2-row diatonic, bisonoric treble and a 12-button diatonic unisonoric bass.
*In Scotland, the favoured diatonic accordion is the instrument known as the British Chromatic Accordion. While the right hand is bisonoric, the left hand follows the Stradella system. The elite form of this instrument is generally considered to be the German manufactured "Shand Morino", produced by Hohner with the input of the late Sir Jimmy Shand. [p.98, Howard, Rob (2003) "An A to Z of the Accordion and related instruments" Stockport: Robaccord Publications ISBN 0-9546711-0-4]

History

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 in 1816 or earlier by Friedrich Lohner of Nürnberg in the German State of Bavaria. [This is the accordion owned by Fredrik Dillner of Sweden which was built by F. Lohner of Nürnberg, in the German State of Bavaria in 1816 or earlier. See [http://www.ksanti.net/free-reed/essays/dillner_interview.html Interview With Fredrik Dillner - The Owner Of What May Be The World's Oldest Accordion (Probably Built In 1816 Or Earlier)] ]

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 in Vienna [A summary and pictures of this patent can be found at [http://www.ksanti.net/free-reed/history/demian.html Demian's accordion patent] (The Classical Free-Reed, Inc.)] . 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).

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 to for travelers to take with them and use 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 advantagesFact|date=October 2008.

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.

Use in classical music

Although the accordion is best known primarily as a folk instrument, it has been used with increasing frequency by classical composers. The earliest surviving concert piece written for the accordion is " _fr. Thême varié très brillant pour accordéon methode Reisner", written in 1836 by Miss Louise Reisner of Paris, an accordionist and amateur composer.

The Russian composer, Piotr Ilyitch Tchaikovsky, included four optional single-action diatonic accordions in his "Orchestral Suite No. 2 in C Major, op. 53" (1883), simply to add a little color to the third movement: "Scherzo burlesque".

The Italian composer, Umberto Giordano, included the single-action diatonic accordion in his opera Fedora (1898). The accordionist appears on-stage—along with a folk-trio consisting of a piccolo player and triangle player—three times in the third act (which is set in Switzerland), to accompany a short and simple song which is sung by a little Savoyard (Alpine shepherd).

In 1915, the American composer, Charles Ives, included a chorus of diatonic accordions (or concertinas) [The orchestra score ambiguously lists the part sometimes as "accordions" and sometimes as "concertinas."] —along with two pianos, celesta, harp, organ, zither and an optional theremin—in his "Orchestral Set No. 2". The accordion part—written for the right-hand only—consists of eighteen measures at the very end of the eighteen-minute-long three-movement work. All the above works were written for the diatonic button accordion.

The first composer to write specifically for the chromatic accordion (able to play all 12 notes of the chromatic scale) was Paul Hindemith. In 1921 he included the harmonium in "Kammermusik No. 1", a chamber work in four movements for twelve players, but later rewrote the harmonium part for accordion. Other German composers also wrote for the accordion. [ See [http://www.akkordeon-online.de/english.htm "Accordion Composers in German"] ]

In 1922 the Austrian composer, Alban Berg, included a short on-stage accordion part in his landmark opera Wozzeck, Op. 7. The instrument—marked "Ziehharmonika bzw. Akkordeon" in the score—appears only during the tavern garden ("wirthausgarten") scene, along with an on-stage ("Bühnenmusik") ensemble consisting of: two fiddles (violins tuned up a tone), one clarinet in C, one guitar and one bombardon in F (or bass tuba), to lend a touch of authenticity to the "deutsche bier garten" setting.

Other composers who wrote for the accordion during the first half of the 20th century were:
* Virgil Thomson: "Four Saints in Three Acts" (1928)
* Serge Prokofiev: "Cantata for the 20th Anniversary of the October Revolution", op. 74 (1936)
* Paul Dessau: "Mother Courage" (1936) and Die Verurteilung des Lukullus (1949)
* Dmitri Shostakovich: "Jazz Suite No. 2" (1938)
* Jean Françaix: "Apocalypse According to St. John" (1939)
* Darius Milhaud: "Prelude and Postlude for "Lidoire" (1946)
* Henry Brant: "All Soul's Carnival" (1949)
* George Antheil—of Ballet mécanique fame: "Accordion Dance for accordion and orchestra" (1951)
* John Serry, Sr.: "American Rhapsody" (1955), to name a few. [ Above paragraphs referenced from Henry Doktorski, "The Classical Squeezebox: A Short History of the Accordion and Other Free-Reed Instruments in Classical Music," The Classical Free-Reed, Inc. (1997). ]

The free-bass accordion in classical music

Listen
filename=YuriMedianikScarlattiSonataFDur.ogg
title=Sonata F-dur K.107 L.474
description= [http://www.yurimedianik.com Yuri Medianik] playing a harpsichord piece by Domenico Scarlatti on a free-bass bayan accordion. - 460 KB.
format=Ogg
Despite efforts by accordion performers and organizations to present the accordion as a serious instrument to the classical music world, the much-coveted breakthrough into the mainstream of serious musical circles did not take place until after leading accordionists more or less abandoned the stradella-bass accordion (an instrument limited to only bass and pre-set chord buttons on the left-hand manual) and embraced the free-bass accordion (an instrument which could play single pitches on the left-hand manual with a range of three octaves or more, similar to the right-hand manual). Composers found the free-bass accordion much more attractive and easier to write for as it liberated the instrument from the tyranny of a limited range of bass notes (only a minor seventh) and the pre-set chord buttons. [It should be noted that both Hindemith and Berg wrote for the free-bass accordion in 1922.]

Despite being invented as early as 1912, the instrument did not really become popular until the mid-twentieth century; when it was "discovered" by classical accordionists. The Danish accordionist Mogens Ellegaard, regarded by many as the father of the avant-garde accordion movement, described his introduction to the new accordion:

Ellegaard continued,

"Symphonic Fantasy and Allegro" was premiered by the Danish Radio Symphony with the composer conducting. Ole Schmidt made the following comment about the work, "I hated accordion until I met Mogens Ellegaard. He made me decide to write an accordion concerto for him." [Ole Schmidt, cited in the CD booklet for "Contemporary Danish Accordion Music", performed by Mogens Ellegaard with the Danish Radio Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Ole Schmidt (Solrod Strand, Denmark: Independent Music, 1987).]

Other Danish composers soon followed Schmidt [For compositions particularly written for Ellegaard, see contents of the "Mogens Ellegaard collection" that are listed at [http://www.kb.dk/da/nb/samling/ma/elleg.html The Royal Library of Denmark] (Danish), also listing compositions written for him and their author.] :
* Niels Viggo Bentzon wrote "Concerto for Accordion" (1962-63), "In the Zoo" (1964) and "Sinfonia concertante" (1965) for six accordions, string orchestra and percussion.
* Per Nørgård wrote "Anatomic Safari" (1967) for solo accordion and "Recall" (1968) for accordion and orchestra, which was dedicated to Lars Dyremose, director of the Danish Accordion Academy.
* Karl Aage Rasmussen wrote "Invention" (1972)
* Hans Abrahamsen wrote "Canzone" (1977-8) for solo accordion.
* Steen Pade, Nørgård's student, wrote a concerto for accordion and three solo works: "Excursions With Detours" (1984), "Aprilis" (1987) and "Cadenza" (1987).
* Vagn Holmboe wrote "Sonata", Op. 143A.

In Europe, free bass accordion performance has reached a very high level and the instrument is considered worthy of serious study in music conservatories Fact|date=June 2008. Modern and avant-garde composers such as Sofia Gubaidulina, Edison Denisov, Luciano Berio, Per Norgard, Arne Nordheim, Jindrich Feld, Franco Donatoni, Toshio Hosokawa, Mauricio Kagel, Patrick Nunn and Magnus Lindberg have written for the free bass accordion and the instrument is becoming more frequently integrated into new music chamber and improvisation groups.

In the United States, the free-bass accordion is heard occasionally. Beginning in the 1960s, competitive performance on the accordion of classical piano compositions, by the great masters of music, occurred. Although never mainstreamed in the larger musical scene, this convergence with traditional classical music propelled young accordionists to an ultimate involvement with classical music heretofore not experienced.Fact|date=September 2008

Within the United States, a number of instrumentalists have demonstrated the unique orchestral capabilities of the free bass accordion while performing at the nation's premier concert venues and encouraging contemporary composers to write for the instrument. Included among the leading orchestral artists was John Serry, Sr. A concert accordionist, soloist, composer, and arranger, Serry performed extensively in both symphonic orchestras and jazz ensembles as well as on live radio and television broadcasts. His refined poetic artistry gained respect for the free bass accordion as a serious concert instrument among prominent classical musicians and conductors of the early twentieth century.

Recently Guy Klucevsek has built a reputation on combining folk styles with classical forms and makes extensive use of the free bass. New York's William Schimmel, who composes and performs in many genres, is a leading exponent of the "quint" style free bass system and uses it extensively in tandem with the standard stradella system.

Use in traditional music

Since its invention, the accordion has become popularly integrated into a lot of varying traditional music styles all over the world, ranging from the European polka and the Colombian Vallenato to Korean trot music. See the list of traditional music styles that incorporate the accordion.

Sometimes, certain traditional music styles may even be tied to a certain type of accordion, like the Schrammel accordion for Schrammelmusik or the Trikitixa for Basque music. It would be hard to name one country in which the accordion did not play a significant role in its music tradition. It has even been idealized in literature [Wallace, Len. "The Accordion - The People's Instrument" (1989) [http://cfmb.icaap.org/content/26.3/BV26-3art3.pdf Online PDF] ] .

Use in popular music

In popular music, it is generally considered exotic and old-fashioned to include the accordion, especially in music for advertisements. Nevertheless, some popular acts do use the instrument in their distinctive sounds. See the list of popular music acts that incorporate the accordion.

The instrument was also used in the Disney song "Whale of a Tale" from 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea, as well as Donald Duck's song, "Quack Quack Quack". It was used in a Christmas setting for the song "Nuttin' for Christmas".

Accordion jokes

While the accordion is a versatile instrument and is widely played throughout the world, it is not universally respected. The 1954 Edition of "Grove's Dictionary of Music and Musicians" describes the accordion as producing "quite the most unpleasant musical sound ever devised by the inventor's and the instrument maker's ingenuity". [Blom, E. (ed.)(1954): "Grove's Dictionary of Music and Musicians", 5th ed. New York, St. Martin's Press, Vol. 5 p. 919] The instrument has been the butt of jokes at least since 1866, when the French painter and cartoonist, Honoré Daumier (1808-1879), created by zincography a picture published in "Le Journal Amusant" of an accordionist and a man playing snooker who stated in the caption: "One does not yet have the right to kill the people who play this instrument, but there is hope that we will soon get it." [ L'Accordeon, dit soufflet a musique," Le Journal Amusant, Paris (1866). This image was reproduced in "How to Play Diatonic Button-Accordion," by Henry Doktorski, published by Santorella Publications (2007).] [View [http://www.daumier-register.org/detail_popup.php?
]
]

A more recent 1986 jibe is one from Gary Larson, author of The Far Side, who drew a cartoon with the punchline "Welcome to heaven, here's your harp. Welcome to hell, here's your accordion." [ See [http://x61.xanga.com/42c1047a7643279075159/b11327346.jpgthe Larson cartoon] ]

Manufacturing process

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. [ [http://science.enotes.com/how-products-encyclopedia/accordion How Accordions Are Made] ]

The best accordions are always hand-made, especially in the aspect of reeds; completely hand-made reeds have a far better tonal quality than even the best automatically-manufactured reeds. Some accordions have been modified by individuals striving to bring a more pure sound out of low-end instruments, such as the ones improved by Yutaka Usui [ [http://www.irishdancemaster.com/ Yutaka Usuai] , Japanese-born accordion craftsman.] , a Japanese-born craftsman.

Other audio samples

Accordion organizations

* Accordion Teacher's Guild (ATG)
* American Accordion Musicological Society
* American Accordionists' Association (AAA)
* Closet Accordion Players of America (CAPA)
* Confédération Internationale des Accordéonistes

Notes and References

External links

* [http://bayan.skyrock.com/ "Accordionists" Blog]
* [http://sylviejamet.over-blog.com/ Accordion and Music Blog]
* [http://www.accordionradio.co.uk Accordion Radio]
* [http://accordiontrainer.artillery.be/ Accordion Trainer] - Will teach you the Stradella basses as a game.
* [http://www.trilokan.com/used-accordions/video/ Accordions] - A collection of media and videos of musicians playing the accordion.
* [http://www.accordions.com Accordions Worldwide]
* [http://www.aamsaccordionfestival.com/ American Accordion Musicological Society]
* [http://www.accordionpage.com/diskant.html Chromatic C-system button layout]
* [http://www.ksanti.net/free-reed/ Classical Free Reed, Inc., The] - An organization dedicated to the advancement of free-reed instruments in classical music.
* [http://www.accordions.com/cia/ Confédération Internationale des Accordéonistes] , a member of the IMC, sponsored by UNESCO
* [http://www.organetto.info/ Diatonic Accordion Academy]
* [http://www.sackpfeyffer-zu-linden.de/accordion.html Information about accordions with Stradella bass system] , table for creation of additional chords with the Stradella bass system
* [http://www.themusicroom-online.co.uk/ Online Accordion Advice and Shop]
* [http://www.pianoaccordion.info/ Piano Accordion]
*, an open repository for squeezebox knowledge on Wikia
* [http://www.accordion-wiki.com/ The Accordion Wiki]
* [http://www.coleclough.com/ UK Accordionist]
* [http://www.accordionusa.com/ United States National Accordion News (Accordion USA)]
* [http://www.accordionflashcards.com/ Videos and flashcards to learn Stradella bass system]
* [http://xantorohara.110mb.com/xenoharmonica XenoHarmonica] , a chromatic button accordion emulator. Both online and as software.


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  • accordion — [ə kôr′dē ən] n. [Ger akkordion < akkord, harmony (prob. < It accordare, to be in tune: see ACCORD) + ion as in ORCHESTRION] a musical instrument with keys, metal reeds, and a bellows: it is played by alternately pulling out and pressing… …   English World dictionary

  • Accordion — Ac*cor di*on, n. [See {Accord}.] (Mus.) A small, portable, keyed wind instrument, whose tones are generated by play of the wind upon free metallic reeds. [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

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  • Accordion — Accordion, die Handharmonika, von dem Wiener Damian 1829 erfunden; in ihrer einfachsten Gestalt hörte man sie einige Zeit lang in allen Straßen …   Herders Conversations-Lexikon

  • accordion — (n.) 1831, from Ger. Akkordion, from Akkord musical chord, concord of sounds, be in tune (Cf. It. accordare to attune an instrument ); ultimately from same source as English ACCORD (Cf. accord) (v.), with suffix on analogy of clarion, etc.… …   Etymology dictionary

  • accordion — [n] musical instrument concertina, groanbox*, melodeon, squeezebox*, stomach Steinway*, windbox*; concepts 463,499 …   New thesaurus

  • accordion — ► NOUN ▪ a musical instrument played by stretching and squeezing with the hands to work a bellows, the melody and chords being sounded by buttons or keys. DERIVATIVES accordionist noun. ORIGIN from Italian accordare to tune …   English terms dictionary

  • accordion — /euh kawr dee euhn/, n. Music. 1. Also called piano accordion. a portable wind instrument having a large bellows for forcing air through small metal reeds, a keyboard for the right hand, and buttons for sounding single bass notes or chords for… …   Universalium

  • Accordion — Vorlage:Infobox Musikinstrument/Wartung/Parameter Tonumfang fehltVorlage:Infobox Musikinstrument/Wartung/Parameter Klangbeispiel fehlt Akkordeon engl.: Accordion, ital.: Fisarmonica …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • accordion — /əˈkɔdiən / (say uh kawdeeuhn) noun 1. a portable wind instrument with bellows and button like keys sounded by means of metallic reeds. 2. a piano accordion. –adjective 3. having folds like the bellows of an accordion: accordion pleats; accordion …  

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