SweetMelody
Newbie
Please explain how to do a cha-cha beat on my accordion.
FWIW:Please explain how to do a cha-cha beat
SweetMelody,Thank you so much, very useful. This beat is not explained in any accordion book.
Thank you so much, very useful. This beat is not explained in any accordion book.
The Colman Frog is still there in a museum in Fredericton, and the magnetic hill is still famous in Moncton.SweetMelody,
On a completely, non accordion, subject, I see you are in Fredericton.
I was in Fredericton in 1970, on the way up to Nova Scotia, and I seem to remember there was a museum there which had a giant frog in a glass case, Alongside was an old photo of a man looking at the frog and it came up to his knees!!
I also seem to recall a "magnetic road" where you put the car into neutral gear and it appeared to roll uphill.
Mind you this was over 50 years ago and my memory could be letting me down![]()
Thanks, I will dig up my old palmer collection.There was a Palmer-Hughes book dedicated to the Cha-Cha. Now out-of-print, but you could probably dig up a used copy.
They're all original pieces or arrangements of old (probably public domain) songs. No *hits*. But fun to play. Interestingly, the bass pattern used in it is pretty much the standard alternating bass pattern you use for polkas/marches/etc. The cha-cha rhythm comes from how they've arranged the right hand against that steady left hand beat. (Cha-cha is, after all, a very "four on the floor" sort of beat.)
Alternatively, there's Angelo DiPippo's "Basic Latin American Beats for Accordion" that briefly covers Cha-Chas as well as Beguine, Mambo, and lots of others. It does put more variety in the bass pattern. Sort of out-of-print, but I think you can still get reprints from Deffner: https://ernestdeffner.com/basic-latin-american-beats-for-accordion.html
Thanks for thatThe Colman Frog is still there in a museum in Fredericton, and the magnetic hill is still famous in Moncton.
The frog in the museum is a taxidermy of the real frog, so it must have been real.Thanks for that. Do you know if it is a real frog? It seems too big to be real.