Melodeon (accordian)
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A melodeon or diatonic button accordion is a member of the free-reed aerophone family of musical instruments. It is a type of
button accordion A button accordion is a type of accordion on which the melody-side keyboard consists of a series of buttons. This differs from the piano accordion, which has piano-style keys. Erich von Hornbostel and Curt Sachs categorize it as a free reed aerop ...
on which the
melody A melody (from Greek language, Greek μελῳδία, ''melōidía'', "singing, chanting"), also tune, voice or line, is a Linearity#Music, linear succession of musical tones that the listener perceives as a single entity. In its most liter ...
-side keyboard contains one or more rows of buttons, with each row producing the notes of a single
diatonic Diatonic and chromatic are terms in music theory that are most often used to characterize Scale (music), scales, and are also applied to musical instruments, Interval (music), intervals, Chord (music), chords, Musical note, notes, musical sty ...
scale Scale or scales may refer to: Mathematics * Scale (descriptive set theory), an object defined on a set of points * Scale (ratio), the ratio of a linear dimension of a model to the corresponding dimension of the original * Scale factor, a number ...
. The buttons on the
bass Bass or Basses may refer to: Fish * Bass (fish), various saltwater and freshwater species Music * Bass (sound), describing low-frequency sound or one of several instruments in the bass range: ** Bass (instrument), including: ** Acoustic bass gui ...
-side keyboard are most commonly arranged in pairs, with one button of a pair sounding the fundamental of a
chord Chord may refer to: * Chord (music), an aggregate of musical pitches sounded simultaneously ** Guitar chord a chord played on a guitar, which has a particular tuning * Chord (geometry), a line segment joining two points on a curve * Chord ( ...
and the other the corresponding major
triad Triad or triade may refer to: * a group of three Businesses and organisations * Triad (American fraternities), certain historic groupings of seminal college fraternities in North America * Triad (organized crime), a Chinese transnational orga ...
(or, sometimes, a minor triad). Diatonic button accordions are popular in many countries, and used mainly for playing popular music and traditional folk music, and modern offshoots of these genres.


Nomenclature

Various terms for the diatonic button accordion are used in different parts of the English-speaking world. * In Britain and Australia, the term ''melodeon'' is commonly used, regardless of whether the instrument has one, two, or three rows of melody buttons. * In Ireland, ''melodeon'' ( ga, mileoidean or ''an bosca'') is reserved for instruments with a single row of melody buttons (a "one-row" instrument), while instruments with two or three rows are called ''button accordions'' (often simply ''accordions''). * In North America, both one-row and multi-row instruments are usually simply called ''accordions''. (Historically, the term melodeon was applied to various 19th-century free-reed
organs In biology, an organ is a collection of tissues joined in a structural unit to serve a common function. In the hierarchy of life, an organ lies between tissue and an organ system. Tissues are formed from same type cells to act together in a fu ...
.) To simplify matters and avoid ambiguity, in the remainder of this article the term diatonic button accordion, or DBA, will be used.


International terms

* The Basque terms are , or . * The Brazilian Portuguese terms are ''Oito Baixos'' (lit. eight basses), ''Sanfona de Oito Baixos'', ''Pé de Bode'' (lit. goat foot), ''Acordeão Diatônico'' or ''Gaita-ponto''. * The Catalan term is ''acordió diatònic''. * The Dutch terms are and . * The Estonian term is ''lõõtspill''. *The Finnish term is ''kaksirivinen haitari'' * France: the term ''accordéon diatonique'' (familiarly, ''diato'') is used; ''mélodéon'' is sometimes used for one-row instruments. * The usual German terms are 'Ziehharmonika', ''Handharmonika'' or ''Knopfakkordeon''. * In Italy, a diatonic button accordion is a ''fisarmonica diatonica'' or ''organetto''. * In Limburgish it is known as trèkzak or ''kwetsjbuul'' / ''kwetsjbujel''. * The Lithuanian term is '' armonika''. * In Mexico, as in Colombia, it is called "acordeón diatónico" or "acordeón de botones". * The Norwegian term is (lit. two-row). * In Portugal (especially in the north) it is called ''concertina'', not to be confused with the English word " concertina". * The Russian term is
garmon The garmon ( rus, гармо́нь, p=gɐˈrmonʲ, links=yes, from rus, гармо́ника, p=gɐˈrmonʲɪkə, r=garmonika, cognate of English ''harmonica''), commonly called garmoshka, is a kind of Russian button accordion, a free-reed wi ...
. * The Czech term is ''heligonka''. * The Slovak term is ''heligónka''. * The Slovenian term is ''diatonična harmonika'' and more frequently ''frajtonar'ca'' * The Swedish term is '' durspel''. * In Argentina it is called ''verdulera''.


Glossary

The following definitions will assist understanding of this article. * ''DBA'': abbreviation for diatonic button accordion * ''single-action'': refers to an instrument on which each key or button produces two notes, as does bisonoric (a term recently coined on the model of the French ''bi-sonore'' and German ''wechseltönig'') * ''double-action'': refers to an instrument on which each key or button produces a single note, as does unisonoric (recently coined as the counterpart of bisonoric) * ''reversal'': on a single-action instrument, a button or key which produces a note available elsewhere on the keyboard, but obtained by using the opposite bellows direction * ''accidental'': any note of the chromatic scale outside the diatonic scale of a DBA's "home" key


Action

Most diatonic button accordions have a "single-action" (or bisonoric) keyboard, meaning that each button produces two notes: one when the bellows are pressed or pushed (closed) and another when the bellows are drawn or pulled (opened). In this respect, these instruments operate like a harmonica. (In contrast, most other types of accordion, for example piano accordions and chromatic button accordions, are "double-action" – or unisonoric – because each key produces a single note regardless of bellows direction.) Other single-action or bisonoric members of the free-reed family include the German concertina, the Anglo-German (or "Anglo") concertina, the bandoneon, the Chemnitzer concertina (see concertina) and the mouth organ (
harmonica The harmonica, also known as a French harp or mouth organ, is a free reed wind instrument used worldwide in many musical genres, notably in blues, American folk music, classical music, jazz, country, and rock. The many types of harmonica inclu ...
). There are varieties of diatonic button accordion that are double-action, such as the
garmon The garmon ( rus, гармо́нь, p=gɐˈrmonʲ, links=yes, from rus, гармо́ника, p=gɐˈrmonʲɪkə, r=garmonika, cognate of English ''harmonica''), commonly called garmoshka, is a kind of Russian button accordion, a free-reed wi ...
.


Distribution of notes on the keyboard and range

Because each button produces two notes, the diatonic scale can be covered in four buttons on a melody row. For example, on a melody row pitched in C, the notes of the lower full octave of the instrument's range are assigned to four buttons as follows: ''Note: the first button in the example above, numbered 1, is likely to be the 3rd or 4th button in a row on an instrument.'' When the bellows are pressed, every button produces a note from the major triad of the home key; in this case, the pattern CEG repeats itself throughout the keyboard. The remaining notes of the diatonic scale are produced when the bellows are drawn or pulled. Since there are seven notes in the diatonic scale, and since each button produces two notes, the note pairings on the buttons change in each octave. In the second full octave of the instrument's range, E is paired with D (instead of with F in the first octave), and so on. Because the range of each row is typically restricted to two complete octaves (with a few notes above and below), the inconsistent note pairing from one octave to the next remains manageable. For detailed diagrams of typical note layouts on various types of diatonic button accordion (DBA), se
melodeon.net


Available keys

On a one-row DBA, music in a single
major Major (commandant in certain jurisdictions) is a military rank of commissioned officer status, with corresponding ranks existing in many military forces throughout the world. When used unhyphenated and in conjunction with no other indicators ...
key and its relative
minor Minor may refer to: * Minor (law), a person under the age of certain legal activities. ** A person who has not reached the age of majority * Academic minor, a secondary field of study in undergraduate education Music theory *Minor chord ** Barb ...
can be played. For example, an instrument in D can play music in D major and B minor. However, the variety of music that can be played on a one-row instrument is wider than these facts might suggest: besides D major and B minor, our one-row instrument in D can play tunes in A
Mixolydian Mixolydian mode may refer to one of three things: the name applied to one of the ancient Greek ''harmoniai'' or ''tonoi'', based on a particular octave species or scale; one of the medieval church modes; or a modern musical mode or diatonic scal ...
and E Dorian, and tunes that use gapped scales, such as pentatonic tunes with a root of D, G or A.


Multi-row systems

A one-row DBA has the advantages of being light and compact, but is by its nature limited to the notes of a single diatonic scale. Since the mid-to-late 19th century, instruments have been produced with more than one row in order to give players a greater choice of scales and tonalities. Multi-row systems can be divided into two broad classes: "fourth-apart" systems and "semitone-apart" systems.


Fourth-apart systems

Fourth-apart systems are the most widespread form of multi-row DBA. Moving from the outside of the keyboard towards the inside, each row is pitched one-fourth higher than its neighbour. Conventionally, the outer keyboard row is specified first: for an example, on a G/C instrument the outer row is in the key of G, the inner row in C. Commonly used in continental Europe are two-row systems in G/C and C/F and three-row systems in G/C/F, but many other permutations exist. In England, in the latter part of the 20th century, the D/G configuration became firmly established as the standard for interpreting traditional music of England, and particularly for the accompaniment of social and Morris dancing. Three-row systems are also popular in Mexico and the United States (in Conjunto,
Tejano Tejanos (, ; singular: ''Tejano/a''; Spanish for "Texan", originally borrowed from the Caddo ''tayshas'') are the residents of the state of Texas who are culturally descended from the Mexican population of Tejas and Coahuila that lived in the ...
, Zydeco and Cajun musics) and Colombia (in Vallenato and Folklor musics). Tunings include B/E/A, A/D/G, G/C/F, F/B/E and E/A/D. The three-row fourth-apart configuration is known as the "international system." Multi-row systems obviously extend the range of tonalities available. But since many notes in the additional rows are "reversals" (duplicate notes produced by the opposite bellows action), multi-row systems allow greater flexibility of phrasing, since the player can often choose whether or not to change bellows direction, or to harmonize with a particular chord, by choosing a note from one row or another. Styles of play have developed in which row-crossing allows the bass side to be used to maximum effect, and the number of changes of bellows direction greatly reduced.


Accidentals and reversals

Another feature designed to increase the flexibility of fourth-apart systems is the inclusion of notes that lie beyond the diatonic scales of each row, or "accidentals". These notes are most often operated by the buttons at the top of the keyboard (that is, closest to the player's chin), below the lowest notes of the scale. Accidentals are sometimes placed on two extra buttons, or a shorter third row of four or more buttons, close to the bellows. The ''Club system'' developed by Hohner is a well-established example of this approach. Using the accidentals, and with the added modification of a ''Gleichton'' (unisonoric second-octave tonic in the centre of the middle row), this system allows players to obtain a fully chromatic scale – albeit in one direction only (draw). Another use of such additional short rows, or half-rows, is to provide reversals (see above) to give the player greater flexibility.


Semitone-apart systems

In semitone-apart systems, moving in from the outside the keyboard, each row is pitched a semitone higher than its neighbour. This configuration makes all the notes of the chromatic scale available. As a result, such instruments could strictly be termed chromatic (rather than diatonic) instruments. In practice, however, the restrictions imposed by the single action and layout of the keyboard lead most players to keep to a fairly restricted range of keys (albeit a wider range than is practical on most fourth-apart systems). The earliest semitone-apart system was C/C, and many variants have been used over the years, notably D/D and G/G. However, since the mid-20th century two main systems have been in widespread use: the B/C system, used mainly for Irish and Scottish music, along with its larger cousin, the B/C/C system (which is now little used outside Scotland); and the C/D system, somewhat less common, used mainly in Irish music. (Irish-American musicians of the mid-20th century used this system with the position of the rows reversed, i.e. D/C.)


Bass systems

Traditionally, one-row instruments have two or four buttons on the bass side, two-row instruments have eight, and three-row instruments twelve. As mentioned above, bass buttons are conventionally arranged in bass-note/chord pairs. Some modern players, particularly in France, are driving a trend towards instruments with more complex bass systems, with as many as 16 or even 18 buttons. Sometimes these more elaborate systems will diverge from the single-action principle, and may feature bass notes only instead of bass-chord pairs of buttons. The B/C/C system (also known as the ''British Chromatic System'') used in Scotland provides a notable example of the use of a double-action bass side with a single-action melody side: these instruments frequently feature a full Stradella bass system as used on piano accordions and chromatic button accordions.


Geographical variations on the DBA theme

Several distinct variations of the DBA have developed in different regions of the world. These include the Russian
garmon The garmon ( rus, гармо́нь, p=gɐˈrmonʲ, links=yes, from rus, гармо́ника, p=gɐˈrmonʲɪkə, r=garmonika, cognate of English ''harmonica''), commonly called garmoshka, is a kind of Russian button accordion, a free-reed wi ...
, the
Steirische Harmonika The Steirische Harmonika () is a type of bisonoric diatonic button accordion important to the alpine folk music of Croatia (Hrvatsko zagorje), Slovenia, the Czech Republic, Austria, the German state of Bavaria, and the Italian South Tyrol. The St ...
:de:Bild:Schwarz-kaerntnerlkand.jpg Picture of Steirische Harmonika or
Slovenian Slovene or Slovenian may refer to: * Something of, from, or related to Slovenia, a country in Central Europe * Slovene language, a South Slavic language mainly spoken in Slovenia * Slovenes The Slovenes, also known as Slovenians ( sl, Sloven ...
-style accordion that is popular in Alpine regions of Europe, the Swiss
Schwyzerörgeli The Schwyzerörgeli is a type of diatonic button accordion used in Swiss folk music. The name derives from the town/canton of Schwyz where it was developed. ''Örgeli'' is the diminutive form of the word ''Orgel'' (organ). Outside of Switzerland t ...
and the Basque trikitixa; the last two combine single- and double-action (bisonoric and unisonoric) features. A common type of Italian ''organetto'' has a single melody row augmented with a very short half-row of between two and four buttons (often smaller in diameter than those on the main row) providing reversals only.


Advantages and disadvantages of the diatonic system

DBAs have two main advantages when compared with chromatic accordions such as piano accordions and chromatic button accordions: 1) smaller size and lighter weight, 2) and the rhythmic effects inherent in the single ("push-pull") action. The size and weight difference results from the nature of accordion reeds, which produce sound when air is moved through them in one direction only. In other words, for any key or button, two reeds are necessary: one to sound on the press, and one to sound on the draw. Because a double-action instrument sounds the same note on both press and draw, it needs two reeds for any given note in its range, where a single-action instrument—which sounds a different note on press and draw—requires only one. Any double-action instrument thus requires roughly twice as many reeds as an equivalent single-action instrument, making it larger and considerably heavier. (Another way to understand this difference is to consider the fact that a double-action instrument generally requires twice as many keys or buttons to produce a range of notes as a single-action instrument: for example, a piano accordion requires 8 keys (16 reeds) to sound a diatonic scale from C to C', where a DBA pitched in C requires 4 buttons (8 reeds) to produce the same notes.) This size and weight advantage is somewhat eroded in more complex, multi-row variants of the DBA, alluded to below. The rhythmic effects inherent in the push-pull action are very well suited to the lively rhythms of dance music, and traditional dance music in particular. (On multi-row fourth-apart instruments, players can to some extent counter the natural push-pull effect with a row-crossing playing style that "smooths out" the musical phrasing; on semitone-apart systems, depending on the key of the piece being played, players may be obliged to adopt a smoother style.) Additionally, the close-togetherness of the notes on a DBA allow some tunes (particularly the quick folkdances and tunes written for the instrument) to be played with more ease and speed than on the more spread-out keyboards of chromatic- and piano-accordions. For example, playing an Irish reel might be easier on a B/C system diatonic than on a piano-accordion, and a Swiss ''Schottisch'' or ''Ländler'' might be easier to play on a ''Schwyzerörgeli'' than on a piano or even a chromatic due to the chordal/arpeggio phrases that fall naturally on the buttons that are arranged thus. The main disadvantage of the diatonic system is that playing in a wide range of keys is impractical. Attempts to overcome this limitation, for example by adding extra rows and more complicated bass systems, invariably add extra bulk and weight, thereby compromising an advantage in striving to overcome a disadvantage. Extreme examples are 18-bass three-row instruments of the type favoured by some French musicians, and B/C/C accordions with 120-button Stradella basses: the size and weight of both these types can be greater than medium-sized piano or chromatic accordions.


Notable players

* Basque: Kepa Junkera * Belgium: Toon Van Mierlo, Pascale Rubens * Brazil:
Renato Borghetti Renato Borghetti (born July 23, 1963 in Porto Alegre) is a Brazilian folk musician and composer. He works in many genres including traditional styles from his home state of Rio Grande do Sul, other styles of Brazilian music like samba, and inter ...
* Colombia:
Israel Romero Israel Romero Ospino or popularly known as "El Pollo Isra" (Born in Villanueva, La Guajira, Villanueva, Department of La Guajira, La Guajira in 1954) is a Colombian vallenato musician, composer and accordionist. Romero was along Rafael Orozco Mae ...
(Vallenato),
Aniceto Molina Aniceto Molina Aguirre (17 April 1939 – 30 March 2015) was a Colombian cumbia singer-songwriter and accordionist who began playing the instrument at the age of 12. His career lasted for more than four decades. He was popular in Latin American ...
(Cumbia), Alfredo Gutiérrez (Vallenato),
Alejo Durán Gilberto Alejandro Durán Diaz, known to all as Alejo Durán or "El Negro Grande" (the great black Man) (February 9, 1919 – November 15, 1989) was a Colombian vallenato music traditional composer, singer and accordionist. Duran was born in ...
(Vallenato),
Emiliano Zuleta Emiliano Zuleta Baquero was a Colombian vallenato composer, accordion player and singer, popularly known as ''El viejo Mile'' (The Old Mile). Zuleta was born on January 11, 1912, in La Jagua del Pilar, a small town of la Guajira; He died on October ...
(Vallenato),
Colacho Mendoza Nicolas Elias Mendoza Daza, also known as Colacho Mendoza (April 15, 1936 – September 27, 2003) was a Colombian Vallenato accordion player and was crowned king of accordion players on many occasions in the Vallenato Legend Festival. He was born i ...
(Vallenato), Lisandro Meza (Porro and Cumbia), Antonio Rivas (Vallenato). * Dominican Republic:
Krency Garcia Krency Garcia, better known as El Prodigio, is a famous merengue típico accordionist from Cabrera, María Trinidad Sánchez, Cabrera, Dominican Republic. He is known throughout the genre for his rapid instrumental solos, his origination of fusio ...
(Merengue Tipico)
Tatico Henriquez Wilson Deodato da Silva (born January 10, 1981) is a Brazilian football Football is a family of team sports that involve, to varying degrees, kicking a ball to score a goal. Unqualified, the word ''football'' normally means the form of f ...
(Merengue Tipico) * England:
Hazel Askew Lady Maisery are an English folk vocal harmony trio composed of Hannah James (vocals, piano accordion, clogs, foot percussion), Hazel Askew (vocals, melodeon, concertina, harp, bells) and Rowan Rheingans (vocals, fiddle, banjo, bansitar). ...
, Andy Cutting, Tim Edey, John Kirkpatrick,
Brian Peters Brian Peters (born 15 December 1954) is an English folk singer and multi-instrumentalist. He is known particularly for his interpretations of the Child Ballads and his researches in the traditional music of the North-East of England. He is ackno ...
,
Saul Rose Saul Rose (born 1973) is an English folk melodeon player and singer. Biography Born in Harrow, he first picked up the melodeon after breaking his leg at the age of eleven and was taught his first tunes by his father. After entering the BBC ...
,
John Spiers John Spiers (born 1975) is an English diatonic button accordion, melodeon, concertina and bandoneon player. He is widely recognised as one of the leading English melodeon players of his generation. Career file:Purbeck_Valley_Folk_Festival_2 ...
,
Rod Stradling The Old Swan Band is a long-established and influential English country dance band. Early years Its origins lie in the early 1970s with the English country dance band Oak, one of a tiny handful at that time that combined melodeon with fiddles. Tw ...
, John Tams, Tim van Eyken, Martin Ellison, Paul Young, Will Pound, Mark Insley * Ireland: Joe Burke,
Bobby Gardiner Bobby Gardiner (born 1939) is an Irish accordionist and lilting, lilter. He was recruited by Micheal O'Suilleabhain to the Music Department in University College Cork where he has been teaching traditional music for the last 25 years. Biogra ...
,
Joe Cooley Joe Cooley (1924–20 December 1973) was an Irish musician known for his traditional accordion music. Biography Cooley was born in Peterswell, County Galway in 1924. Both his parents were melodeon players, and Joe began playing accordio ...
,
Tony MacMahon Tony MacMahon (18 April 1939 – 8 October 2021) was an Irish button accordion player and radio and television broadcaster. MacMahon's chief early inspiration, accordionist Joe Cooley, was a frequent caller at the MacMahon home in Ennis, Co. Cla ...
, James Keane,
Joe Derrane Joe Derrane (March 16, 1930 - July 22, 2016) was an Irish-American button accordion player, known for re-popularizing the D/C# system diatonic button accordion. Life Derrane was born in Boston, Massachusetts to Irish immigrant parents. His fa ...
, Jackie Daly,
Máirtín O'Connor Máirtín O'Connor is an Irish button accordionist from Galway, Ireland, who began playing at the age of nine, and whose career has seen him as a member of many traditional music groups that include Skylark, Midnight Well, De Dannan, and T ...
,
Sharon Shannon Sharon Shannon (born 8 June 1968) is an Irish musician, best known for her work with the button accordion and for her fiddle technique. She also plays the tin whistle and melodeon. Her 1991 debut album, ''Sharon Shannon,'' was the best-selling ...
, Johnny O'Leary,
Johnny Connolly Johnny Connolly was an Irish musician from Connemara, and one of Ireland's most prominent players of the melodeon (one-row button accordion). In a 2008 TG4 interview, Connolly described how he first took up the instrument: his parents left th ...
* Italy:
Denis Novato Denis Novato (born 1976) is a Slovene musician from Italy, and world champion player of the diatonic accordion. He has been a musician since the late 1980s. Novato was born in Dolina near Trieste, Italy. From the age of ten he studied for Susann ...
,
Riccardo Tesi Riccardo Tesi (; born 1956 in Pistoia, Tuscany, Italy) is an Italian musician. He specializes in folk music. His instrument is the diatonic accordion or melodeon. He has founded or recorded with a number of groups, including Banditaliana an ...
* Mexico:
Ramón Ayala Ramón Covarrubias Garza (born December 8, 1945), known by his stage name Ramón Ayala, is a Mexican singer, composer and songwriter of Norteño music. Discography Studio albums (Ramón Ayala Y Sus Bravos Del Norte) * ''La Pura Maña'' (1971 ...
(Norteño), * Newfoundland: Harry Hibbs,
Minnie White Minnie White was a Storyville brothel proprietor in the early part of the twentieth century. She operated out of a large mansion at 221 North Basin Street, in New Orleans, Louisiana New Orleans ( , ,Frank Maher * Norway:
Rannveig Djønne Rannveig Djønne (born March 3, 1974) is a Norwegian folk musician from Djønno in the municipality of Ullensvang, Norway. Djønne plays diatonic button accordion and is a graduate of the Ole Bull Academy in Voss. She released her first CD in D ...
, * Portugal:
Quim Barreiros Joaquim de Magalhães Fernandes Barreiros (born June 19, 1947, in Vila Praia de Âncora, Portugal), known professionally as Quim Barreiros, is a Portuguese Pimba music writer,singer and accordion player, more known for his double entendre songs. ...
(Tipico) * Scotland:
Peter Wyper Peter Wyper (1861 in Lanarkshire, ScotlandHenry Doktorski. "Who Was First?" and the Recording of "Vaudeville Accordion Classics"'. The Free-Reed Journal, November 2004 – 1920) was a player of the diatonic button accordion (or ''melodeon''), ...
,
Jimmy Shand Sir James Shand (28 January 1908 – 23 December 2000) was a Scottish musician who played traditional Scottish dance music on the accordion. His signature tune was "The Bluebell Polka". Life and career James Shand was born in East Wemyss in ...
,
Will Starr Will Starr (27 April 1922 – 6 March 1976) was a Scottish solo accordionist. Early life Will Starr was born William Starrs, the oldest son of a family of eight, in the mining village of Croy in Central Scotland. At the age of two, Will atte ...
,
Fergie MacDonald Fergie MacDonald MBE (born 1938, Glasgow, Scotland) is a Scottish accordionist who specializes in ceilidh music and plays the button key accordion. A trained physiotherapist and an international clay pigeon shooter, MacDonald is considered to ...
* Slovenia:
Lojze Slak Lojze Slak (23 July 1932 – 29 September 2011) was a Slovenes, Slovenian musician. Slak was one of the pioneers of Slovene popular folk music, based on diatonic button accordion and author of several evergreen songs, performed by his Lojzeta Slak ...
* USA: John Kimmel,
Joe Derrane Joe Derrane (March 16, 1930 - July 22, 2016) was an Irish-American button accordion player, known for re-popularizing the D/C# system diatonic button accordion. Life Derrane was born in Boston, Massachusetts to Irish immigrant parents. His fa ...
, Huddie Ledbetter,
Marc Savoy Marc Savoy ( ) (born October 1, 1940) is an American musician, and builder and player of the Cajun accordion. Early life He was born on his grandfather's rice farm near Eunice, Louisiana. His grandfather was a fiddler, who occasionally played w ...
(Louisiana Cajun), J
Boozoo Chavis Wilson Anthony "Boozoo" Chavis (pronounced CHAY-viss) (October 23, 1930 – May 5, 2001) was an American accordion player, singer, songwriter and bandleader. He was one of the pioneers of zydeco, the fusion of Cajun and blues music developed ...
(Louisiana "Zydeco"), Flaco Jimenez ("Conjunto") Mojo of Mojo & The Bayou Gypsies (Zydeco & Cajun)


Repertoire


Classical

* ''Dances from a New England Album, 1856'' for orchestra by William Bergsma includes parts for melodeon (movements I–III) and harmonium (movement IV).


See also

*
Accordion Accordions (from 19th-century German ''Akkordeon'', from ''Akkord''—"musical chord, concord of sounds") are a family of box-shaped musical instruments of the bellows-driven free-reed aerophone type (producing sound as air flows past a reed ...
* Bandoneon *
Cajun accordion A Cajun accordion (in Cajun French: ''accordéon''), also known as a squeezebox, is single-row diatonic button accordion used for playing Cajun music. History Many different accordions were developed in Europe throughout the 19th century, and ...
* Chromatic button accordion * Concertina * Piano accordion *
Ralé-poussé The ralé-poussé is a diatonic accordion played on the island of Réunion in the southwest Indian Ocean. It is played in the Creole music of the 20th century. The name refers to the "push-pull" motion of diatonic playing, which distinguishes the i ...


Notes


Footnotes


Citations


External links


Melodeon.net

Italian Diatonic Accordion Academy – The Diatonic Accordion Conservatory
{{DEFAULTSORT:Diatonic Button Accordion Melodeon Accordion