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Fisarmonica Piemontese

  • Thread starter Thread starter maugein96
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maugein96

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Lets now take a trip to Valle daosta in Piemonte with three guys playing Rancos (remember them?). French musette is popular in the area, as villages like Courmayeur are only just in Italy on the south side of the Mont Blanc Tunnel, and these three get stuck in . Sound quality isnt great, but listen to their spontaneous version of Indifference.

 
The Rancos work for me, and the style - this is getting pretty near a form of jazz, it seems to me.
 
Rancos are/were being made again, but I don't know by whom, and there aren't many about. They were originally made in Vercelli in Piemonte, and this clip looks as though it was filmed at an outdoor demo as a "plug" for the make, as the accordions are all brand new. The original Ranco factory closed in 1966, according to what I've read, and the video was uploaded in 2010.Somebody on here will probably know if they are still on the go, which I would doubt.

The family forbade the name Ranco to be used after their demise, but presumably with the passage of time that has been overcome. The original accordions featured some innovative construction, like having "floating" pallets and duralium reed plates. No wax was used and the reed plates were pinned and glued. Don't want to get too technical in case somebody asks me the inevitable question I cannot answer. Some members might know what the content of this paragraph means, but I certainly don't.

With regard to the style it is a sort of swing, although I've seen the oldest of the three players play standard musette tunes at "proper" tempo. I've no idea who any of them are, and I've only been to that area once in my life when as per usual never heard an accordion played at all. A friend of mine drew my attention to the fact that there were one or two "French" style players in Valle d'Aosta, and it looks as though these guys were three of them. Whether the music is typical of the area is open to question, but it does seem to be yet another area where French style CBA accordions (as played by the oldest player) are used.
 
Donn,

Cooperfisa have a great reputation for their three voice musette, but Ive never seen one in the flesh. One or two French players had them but never stuck with them.

From the limited info available about them, Rancos were made for a while from 2009 by Polverini, who are based in premises near Ancona, in the Marche area of Italy. Thats on the Adriatic coast and nowhere near Vercelli.

Polverini is a name Id never heard of before and their current catalogue does not list the Ranco brand at all. Id never even seen a Polverini accordion on You Tube, but I have now! They have a great sound IMHO, and it would appear that they have/had some connection with Castelfidardo.

Here is a link to their website, and youll get sound samples on You Tube.

http://www.polverini.com/index.html#rev-slider
 
Discovered that the oldest of the three guys is Eligio Gontier, from the mountain village of Champorcher in Valle d'aosta. He apparently runs a heating business and is a semi-pro accordionist, mainly in the French musette style.

The Italian first name and French surname are clues that he is from the southern Alps. The Piemontese always say they got the best deal as they are on the sunny side of Monte Bianco/Mont Blanc. The French have the dull northern side, and I can vouch for that. Left Chamonix in France one day with heavy clothing and arrived in Courmayeur on the Italian side where it was stifling hot. Beautiful area, really nice people, but my wallet hated every minute of it. Very, very expensive part of the world, made so by the skiing fraternity.
 
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