I'm sure the bass will be very silent after this. A very effective method!Ok, I will open one hole in the bass plate and put 20 cm of rubber garden hose on it packed with fibreglass and a perforated pipe down the middle.


I'm sure the bass will be very silent after this. A very effective method!Ok, I will open one hole in the bass plate and put 20 cm of rubber garden hose on it packed with fibreglass and a perforated pipe down the middle.
Your colorful description of pub sessions is consistent with my experience in sessions in many places (Ireland, Britain, US) over many years. I just had my concertina drowned out by revelers at a local pub on St. Patrick's Day and promptly abandoned ship. My accordion might have been loud enough to pierce the cacophony, but don't know the tunes well enough on accordion to play in such a setting. That is why I generally prefer sessions in homes or private rooms where the chatter and distractions are minimal. If we have several "backup instruments" (guitar, piano, bouzouki) the accordion bass is redundant, and annoying if the chord choices are different. So the piano side alone is preferred. But with just a fiddle and flute, the accordion bass can provide a nice accompaniment, if done properly. That is my goal, to provide accompaniment without annoyance. And piano accordion already in a category with banjos and drums as far as causing annoyance to the uninitiated.If you ever attended some of the pub folk sessions hereabouts (in the 1980s) you'd have been very lucky to even hear your own accordion at all, no matter how loudly you played it: you'd be drowned out by the 30 or 40 other instrumentalists (guitars, fiddles, pipes, DBAs, spoons, mandolins, banjo-mandolins, banjos, bodrans, going simultaneously and full pelt!
It used to remind me of trying to catch a wave at a popular break every man or woman for him/herself !
There was just the quick and the dead.
Essentially, you had to know your stuff well enough to play it fluently without any aural feedback!
The moment you hit the first note, the entire mob jumped in. Quite unnerving!
It's amazing how several score patrons crowding a room soaks up/muffles any sound coming out of a piano accordion. This is home territory for a DBA!![]()
Your post really gets to my point. The accordions I've played were great for belting out tunes for polkas and waltzes, but not for playing a sustained bass or chord while playing a melody on the piano keyboard. My keyboard experience started with electric organ, which had lots of ways to combine sounds and to amplify one keyboard while minimizing the other. From you comments there have been accordions which achieve this balance in the past. But apparently even the best ones aren't as good at this as they used to be.It's not just manufacturers but also the designers and craftsmen. Also the customers. When they pay the highest prices, they want the best hand-made reeds everywhere. Which sets you up for the bass overpowering the treble. I have a one-of-a-kind instrument (an old custom-made Morino construction) and what impressed a professional player most about it was not the intricate bass mechanism (which offers 168 different registrations for the standard bass) but how well it balanced out tonally over a large range of left/right registrations one would usually consider incompatible.
The same player said that this was a feature he missed after selling an old Jupiter bayan (where the mechanics were increasingly falling apart) that had just 4 bass reeds and was both poignant and transparent in play in a manner that the (quite top-of-the-line, including from Jupiter) newer instruments he bought failed to provide.
And indeed, when I test-played high end instruments, the one thing routinely irrking me tended to be my inability to find registrations in the left hand that would satisfyingly complement single-reed registrations in the right hand when playing held bass notes.
And I think part of the equation is that manufacturers have shifted their focus from building the best instruments to assembling the best components, without considering their role in the result. And of course, that in turn influences playing styles and literature, making accordions get stuck in a rut of specific styles of music and its execution.
Very basically... it is something that is VERY challenging, becuase if a mistake is made there is zero change of going back. You size the sides of the reed tongue so that minimal air get's it vibrating to it's tone faster. The issue is that if it's done too much or improperly, the sound can break up faster at louder volumes.
Paul mentioned Golas... normally different notes start to vibrate at different speeds. The deeper the sound, the more air it takes to start (for example). On my Gola no matter what note I play, left or right hand, deepest to highest, in whatever register, EVERY note starts and ends with the same amount of air at the same time no matter how soft or loud I play. This is something that no other accordion I have ever played does as well.
This becomes glaringly obvious when I try to play the same way (but cannot of course) on the little student FB36 (for example), where it takes way longer amount of time to get the deepest notes to start vs the higher notes. This then causes me to need to play a bit louder so that they respond quicker in some cases.
I read the thread. Good info even though some of the links to sound were no longer functional. Thanks for the tipSpeak to @saundersbp
He baffled out his accordion I think with caravan insulation.....and has a post somewhere with before and after audio
Seem to remember it was successful
Hope that helps