Who invented the accordion and what is another name for it




















In a standard instrument, the keys are on the player's right-hand side of the instrument. The left-hand side has chord or bass notes, used to play rhythm.

Diatonic accordions have either one, two or three rows of buttons, and each row is tuned to a specific key, having only the notes of that scale. Each button plays a different note depending on whether the bellows are being compressed "pushed" or expanded "pulled".

Chromatic accordions have three to five rows of buttons on the melody side of the instrument. Unlike the diatonic accordion, these buttons are tuned to a specific note, regardless of whether the bellows are being pushed or pulled. Chromatic accordions can generally play in any key, having at least one button for every standard note, whether natural, sharp, or flat. The left-hand side of the instrument contains a variety of chords. Piano accordions are generally the most recognizable to the general public, having been popularized by people like Lawrence Welk and " Weird Al" Yankovic.

The right-hand side is simply a piano keyboard and works just the same. The left-hand has anywhere from eight to chord buttons. Accordions make noise when the bellows fill with air and this air is forced out of holes which have a small reed over them. Accordion makers tune these reeds by hand, and each note may trigger anywhere from one to four reeds—the more reeds, the more volume.

Actively scan device characteristics for identification. Other people believe it was invented in However to answer your question, you asked who invented the accordion in then the man you are looking for was named Cyrill Demian.

The accordion is believed to have been invented in Berlin in by Christian Friedrich Ludwig Buschmann. Cyril Damien invented the accordion in The accordion was invented in Sylvester Graham in in Bound Brook. Cyril Damien invented the accordion in and is also known as the squeezebox or melodeon. In , Cyrill Demian invented the accordion.

Riley hunter in William Burt. It was William Austin Burt in Robert Stephenson invented the Rocket locomotive in Newcastle, England in You will need to be more specific. The wheel was invented back in the stone age. So of course there had to of been a veichle invented. No type writer was invented in Maybe this is what you need? Paul Hodge. I love to play my accordian. The Braille system was developed in by the Frenchman Loius Braille.

It was built in as a result of a competition to choose the best design to power a railway. The fire service was invented by Emperor Augustus in the Roman Era but the fire truck was invented by John Braithwaite between Log in. Musical Instruments. Shaped to resemble the phoenix, the cheng had between 13 and 24 bamboo pipes, a small gourd which acted as a resonator box and wind chamber, and a mouthpiece. Other instruments using a free vibrating reed were developed in ancient Egypt and Greece, and were depicted in many beliefs.

Reed Instrument Development Virtually unchanged after centuries of use, the cheng attracted the attention of European musicians and craftsmen after being taken to Russia around the year Assertions that this marked the introduction of the free-vibrating reed principle in Europe are debatable.

Among the earlier variations on this design in the West was the portative, which was widely heard in England during the 12th and 13th centuries.

The portative consisted of a small keyboard, bellows, and reed pipes, and was strapped onto the player. The regal, later termed the Bible regal because of its wide use in churches, was the next step along this line.

It had a keyboard, one or two sets of bellows, and, unlike the accordion and other open-reed instruments, close beating oboe-like reeds. This instrument eventually lost popularity due to a tendency to go out of tune too easily. It was frequently used for accompanying madrigal singers, between the 15th and 18th centuries. There were actually many varieties of the free-vibrating reed instrument developed during the early s. Some of them are still quite well known today.

Heinrich Band of Krefeld, Germany, invented the bandoneon in ; this square-shaped instrument, played by pressing finger buttons is popular with Argentine tango bands. That same year Alexandre Debain finished his harmonium in Paris. In this pipeless organ commonly found in churches and households until the advent of electric organs in the s air is passed to the reed blocks via foot-operated bellows.

In some early models a second person was required to pump air into the instrument through bellows attached to the rear of the keyboard. Early Literature As the renowned for accordions grew, so did a demand for instruction manuals. The first such textbook, featuring both original music and arrangements of familiar pieces, was written by A.

Reisner and published in Paris in Another tutorial volume, Pichenot's Methode pour l'accordeon, appeared later that year. In Adolph Muller published his instructional book in Vienna, and since then the music market has sustained a flood of similar programs, with about 30 titles published during the s alone.



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