Diatonic button accordion
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A diatonic button accordion or melodeon is a type of button accordion where the melody-side keyboard is limited to the notes of diatonic scales in a small number of keys (sometimes only one). The bass side usually contains the principal chords of the instrument's key and the root notes of those chords.
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[edit] Melodeon
There is some geographic disagreement over the terms button accordion and melodeon. In England a bisonoric (different note on push and draw of the bellows) button accordion with one,two or three rows of buttons on the right hand (melody) side is likely to be called a melodeon. In Ireland a melodeon refers only to one-row instruments, while in the southern United States even these are called accordions[1].
The available notes on the melody side are based on different keys. For example, you could have a 1-row melodeon in the key of G. This would give you the notes G/A - B/C - D/E - F#/G spread over 4 buttons. Commonly used melodeons nowadays include the D/G box with 2 rows, used especially in English traditional music (particularly for the accompaniment of social and Morris dancing), while instruments in G/C, C/F or G/C/F (with three treble rows of buttons), are widely used in France, Italy and central/eastern Europe. Irish traditional musicians generally favour instruments in B/C or C#/D. Because the keys of the latter are a semitone apart, all the notes of the chromatic scale are in theory available (unlike the D/G box or others where the interval is a fourth). There are many variations on these layouts, with 2½ row melodeons, accidentals and various options which players sometimes customise to suit their own requirements.
The two-row melodeon is apparently limited by being able to play only in its two given major keys - e.g. D and G, and their associated minor keys of A and E. However some tunes in the major keys of E and A can also be managed, and in practice most British and Irish traditional music, and north American music with these roots, strays little from this limited set of keys. The vast majority of the traditional repertoire can be played using just fourteen notes available on all two-row melodeons[2].
Well known melodeon players currently recording include English musicians John Spiers (of Spiers and Boden and Bellowhead), John Kirkpatrick, Andy Cutting (of Blowzabella) and Tim van Eyken. There are also many current or recently deceased non-English players whose recordings can be easily located outside their home countries, including Marc Perrone (France), Ricardo Tesi (Italy), Martin O'Connor (Ireland), Sharon Shannon (Ireland), Marc Savoy (Louisiana Cajun), Yves Lambert (Quebec, Canada), Kepa Junkera (Basque), John Delafose (Louisiana "zydeco"), Boozoo Chavis (Louisiana "zydeco") and Flaco Jimenez (United States "Tex-Mex" musician).
[edit] Polka box
[1] Steirische Harmonika or Slovenian-style box is very popular in the Alpine region of Europe. This type of box was also made in the U.S. by Anton Mervar Button Accordion Manufacturer (1885-1942), inducted on November 30, 1991. The main differences are the use of bigger, deeper bass reeds (Helicon reeds) and the single unisonoric note in each RH row but one.
[edit] Hybrids
Most diatonic button accordions (e.g.: melodeon) are bisonoric, meaning each button produces two notes: one when the bellows is compressed, another while it is expanded; other instruments (e.g.: garmon') are unisonoric, with each producing the same note regardless of bellows direction; still others (e.g.: schwyzerörgeli, trikitixa) have a combination of the two types of action.
[edit] Repertoire
[edit] Classical
- Dances from a New England Album, 1856 for orchestra by William Bergsma includes parts for melodeon (movements I-III) and harmonium (movement IV).
[edit] References
- ^ Mallinson, Dave. The D/G Melodeon. Cleckheaton, Yorkshire: mally.com (2002) ISBN 1899512012. Page 3.
- ^ Mallinson, The D/G Melodeon. Page 11.
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- Dave Mallinson's webpage - some useful advice and information about melodeons
- Melodeon.net
- Melodeon FAQ
- Castagnari - a noted contemporary Italian melodeon maker
- Italian Diatonic Accordion Academy - The Diatonic Accordion Conservatory
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