Ventura
Been here for ages!
he works for a Russian accordion maker and wants to get you to wait awhile
Bugari attracted some investors from "the east" and that made some people believe that quality would go down. But so far the quality remains the same. A friend of mine recently bought a new Bugari 289/ARS/C (a very popular model around here) and it is every bit as good as those from "yesteryear". (And I have worked on several of those as well.)I contacted someone and he said 'I wouldn't recommend bugari at the moment' he wouldn't tell me why. Does anyone have an idea why "at the moment", might have something to do with Ukraine?
Congratulations!bought a Nova!
thank you Paul, yes i ordered it. The delivery time says: 'as soon as possible', but it will probably take more than a year before I can take it into my handsCongratulations!
You mean "ordered" (with a long wait to come) or actually found the instrument "in stock" somewhere?
With Pigini a lead time of two years is about average, not just for the Nova. And a local store keeper started being reluctant to sell Pigini when they refused to write up contracts for a fixed price. People here expect to order an accordion at a fixed price, meaning that the price at the time of ordering is the price at delivery. Pigini changed this a few years ago: when you order you have to guarantee how much the accordion is going to cost when it is delivered. Our local vendor finds this unacceptable, and frankly, so do I. They now sell mostly Bugari, Mengascini and some other brands, all of which honor the agreed-upon price when you order.thank you Paul, yes i ordered it. The delivery time says: 'as soon as possible', but it will probably take more than a year before I can take it into my hands
Maybe they have seen the errors of their ways... possibly because of lost sales by not giving a fixed price in the recent past...It is a fixed price with contract luckily
Why did you not ask them what they meant? If they cannot give their opinion (and 99% of the time, that is how you SHOULD be taking this... because this is a decision you should NOT be asking anyone else but doing the research yourself because for you, your opinion should hold the highest value), then maybe they were just chin wagging.I contacted someone and he said 'I wouldn't recommend bugari at the moment' he wouldn't tell me why. Does anyone have an idea why "at the moment", might have something to do with Ukraine?
I also read your earlier comment that you really need a very expensive (i.e. top of the line) instrument for your studies. I find this puzzling. I always recall that Alexander Skliarov won the coupe mondiale long ago, playing a 3 row russian bayan. And I know people around here who finished their studies at the highest level, playing either a Bugari 289/ARS/C4 (piano accordion) or a Pigini Sirius (button accordion). And the teacher from the conservatory (now retires) I know quite well switched from PA to CBA many years ago and he plays a Bugari 580/ARS/C, so quite far from the top of the line. And he never asked students to buy more expensive instruments. So the most expensive accordion should not be needed to finish accordion studies at the highest level. (And if they are at "your" school, something is wrong about the school or the teachers.) The top of the line accordions offer still more refined mechanics (lighter to the touch) and the most expensive reeds with supposedly more dynamic range (although it's still very hard to build accordions so that the combination of reeds plus valves give a constant frequency over a very large dynamic range). I did try a Sirius (Millenium) and Nova side by side and you feel the difference in the mechanics. But that doesn't imply the Sirius is bad in any way.Indeed I will be a lot poorer, but I am positive about the future I will look for a job to pay off the loan and play on the street regularly. ...
Pietro Roffi -- what a find!
How about:
or
(Just this once it's OK to stray a bit off topic.)
A friend of mine and I tried both the Sirius and Nova side by side at the Frankfurter Musikmesse in 2019. The Nova feels lighter to the touch, so it must have just slightly lighter spring tension (and only need that lighter tension). When I was studying the piano it was always best to practice on a piano with more key resistance and then perform on one that was lighter to the touch. With accordions it is a bit different because you practice and perform on your own instrument, so you don't have to anticipate what the "performance instrument" will be. (Very high end pianists do transport their own piano for performances...) The sound of the Sirius and Nova isn't quite the same, but which is better is more a matter of taste.I have tried sirius and nova but unfortunately not side by side, and i remember that there are very similar mechanics feeling (if not the same). I don’t know if there are any differences in mechanics. There was difference in sound- nova has more complex sound than Sirius, and there is big difference in button feeling (standard vs mother of pearl). Can you describe what differences in mechanics did u feel? It’s a pity that manufacturers don’t write exactly about differences with some photos and advantages of higher models. As I’m engineer I would like to know what I’m paying forI know that for musician more important that just specification and technicalities is feeling of the instrument, quality of reeds and sound but these things are hard to measure.
Hard to say which to prefer with such completely different performances in different settings with different music.Pietro Roffi -- what a find!
How about:
...
(Just this once it's OK to stray a bit off topic.)
A friend of mine and I tried both the Sirius and Nova side by side at the Frankfurter Musikmesse in 2019. The Nova feels lighter to the touch, so it must have just slightly lighter spring tension (and only need that lighter tension). When I was studying the piano it was always best to practice on a piano with more key resistance and then perform on one that was lighter to the touch.