Alan Sharkis pid=63978 dateline=1549904373 said:
My teacher is a jazz accordionist. He works in groups that have basses, whether upright or electric and he knows how to use his left hand to work with those basses. I guess his arranging skills contribute to that ability.
Bruce left a couple of items off his rather extensive list of factors that contributed to the decline of accordion music in the United States. I dont know how youd react to my stating them here, but I wish you would:
1. Faithe Deffner, the late owner of a company that imported, sold and serviced Titano and Pancordion accordions, blamed the accordion teachers of the day, saying that many of them considered rock-and-roll a fad that wouldnt last long and refused to expose their students to it. I take it to mean that the teachers couldnt handle it themselves.
2. Aside from Lawrence Welk, accordionists were featured often on many TV programs (e.g. Dick Contino on Ed Sullivans show ad nauseum) and this overexposure contributed to the downfall of accordion music.
Alan Sharkis
The use (or not) of the accordions left hand comes up regularly, especially in loud bands, or when playing smaller accordions with limited basses. Often the easiest choice is to let another instrument take that space. The electric bass obliterated whole orchestras, the accordions band in a box was no exception.
Welk and Contino were definitely part of the oversaturation of the accordion in the media, specifically the media that targeted older or family audiences. The kids wanted their own sounds, and rejected all that square stuff. Theres an amazing article Just Before Rock: Pop Music 1950-1953 Reconsidered by a Hugh Mooney that talks about the demographic shifts that led to the change from maybe waltzing will take over from polka this year? to nope, rock and roll. If youre interested, Ill put a copy up here. Written in 1974, this piece still gets cited for its insight. I wish anything Id write had that much credence years in the future.
https://www.dropbox.com/s/38soqmy1jjmqpjp/Just Before Rock, by Hugh Mooney, Popular Music & Society Vol 3, n 2, 1974a.pdf?dl=0
Faithe Deffner and her cool Tiger Combo Cordion pilot project were one of the few examples of the accordion industry trying to adapt. The Tiger never took off, and the industry definitely didnt embrace the new music. The other was the Cordovox-style organ accordions, but they seem to have mostly been popular with people who already owned accordions, so they didnt increase the pool of players. Without new kids buying in, the industry collapsed.
I was thrilled to find this fantastic Cordovox advertisement to include in my book.
Its from Fabio G. Giottas remarkable history of the Cordovox. If we had details like this on all the Italian accordion brands it would fill bookcases.
http://caffetrieste.com/Abrief.pdf
The 200 pages of online footnotes Im going to make available when my book comes out are almost as exciting as the main text for general reading. So much fun stuff to share and discuss.
donn pid=63980 dateline=1549905347 said:
Eddy Yates pid=63977 dateline=1549903678 said:
That show probably embarrassed half the young accordionists into jettisoning their instruments.
Right, thats what Im talking about - the music. Lawrence Welk was only representative of what was - and wasnt - being done with the accordion, at the time of its demise. The French accordion scene, I suspect has similarly tried to do itself in with excess helpings of cheese - glitzy background-heavy productions with armloads of virtuoso playing but that fail to capture any appealing character of the instrument - but didnt entirely succeed in its suicide attempt the way the US scene did, because theres more cultural history to fall back on (and in the US there was a severe generational conflict at the time, to put a real spin on it.)
Jimmy Shand in Scotland fills sort of the unhip niche that Welk did in the US. In Russia a punk accordion band took the name Play Bayan! from a very square Russian TV show that offered traditional accordion. I imagine a ironic band called The Lawrence Welk Show! wouldnt make it through the court system over here.
A thing I encountered was that Welks show wasnt only associated with accordions. He also promoted the Fender Stratocaster when he hired young Bobby Merrill in 1955 to play it and bring in the kids. So, along with Buddy Holly, the Ventures and Jimi Hendrix, Lawrence Welk provided massive exposure to the instrument that replaced his accordion. For me this shows that just being associated with Welk didnt drive accordions from fashion. There was other reasons the instrument had trouble adapting. This left Welk as the last accordionists standing in the nostalgia market for years, and that was indeed fatal to its coolness.