Here's a good youtube item to refer folk to:
Someone who successfully plays across a range of genres.
Someone who successfully plays across a range of genres.
The accordion, well it's still in the waiting room ready to be called forward. It is at home in folk music but it's really a bit uncomfortable with the way popular music has gone, as it's no longer a star - it usually get the novelty role these days. The accordion does not like being a joker, it wants to be a classical instrument, and you know, I think it's next on the list.
Can you name 5 songs written after 2000 that you actually play on your accordion?
Maybe. People have been trying to push the accordion into the classical world for generations. There were big efforts, some of which succeed for awhile, in the '50s and '60s to have established university music programs add accordion. Accordion associations here in the States would (and still do) commission new classical compositions.
But I've always had mixed feeling about that, because a part of me feels like a lot of that effort was coming from a desperation to "prove" the legitimacy of the instrument. It seems like it might stem from an inferiority complex, rooted in that too-common Western/European mindset that an instrument doesn't count unless it can play "serious" music: Bach and Schubert and Schoenberg and all that. (Not that I'm accusing you of that, Walker.)
Whereas I say that the accordion has nothing to be ashamed of and nothing to prove. Sure, it can play classical. It can play jazz. But so what if it couldn't? It's fundamentally a folk instrument, and that's okay with me. It's also okay with me if people don't take it seriously. A non-serious instrument can still do a lot of good in the world!
I do agree that there's not much role for accordion--or ironically even guitar anymore--in modern pop music. I've always said that, if the accordion were to truly have a "revival", it wouldn't be because the classical or jazz communities decide to bless and elevate it, or because old-fashioned schottisches and polkas suddenly became all the rage again.
I think it would have to be because a brand new kind of music is created that becomes popular and breaks through to a young, mainstream audience. A kind of music in which the accordion is an integral part. Similar to how rock-and-roll exploded on the scene and brought the electric guitar with it.
That's how instruments become popular: By being the tool required to create the music that is popular. Until then, we'll just be playing a niche instrument, keeping a great tradition alive, and having a good time doing it (even if people poke fun now and then). That's not so bad!
Listen to what pianists and cellists are producing. Simple, beautiful music! And it's music the accordion should be claiming.
I agree wholeheartedly. When and how can we motivate people to vote for candidates who support the arts?Comparing the comment from @Walker above. One difference between Europe and the States (and similarly in Anglo Canada), is educational possibilities. In the absence of mass popularity, places with great traditions are often supported by state and other funding. The US has pretty minimal arts and public education seems much lower than many places. Without that kind of support it's harder for young musicians to survive and stick with an instrument. If we had thriving public music education programs all over the US, there'd probably be a few with accordion majors.
I too believe the accordion is fundamentally a folk instrument. But in the UK and Europe the accordion is really ebbing closer to becoming a classical instrument. I have a hunch about this more than ever. The number of universities providing studies in the accordion is ever growing. I would not be surprised if there were a hundred or more now.
In the US? These folks have Congress/Senate "arts report cards" that let you see how your politicians vote. Mine got a "B" because he didn't sign a few "dear colleague" letters about arts funding. I bet a few emails or calls about this rather niche issue might have nudged him to do that.I agree wholeheartedly. When and how can we motivate people to vote for candidates who support the arts?
I kind of dread some white kids forming a cumbia band, ripping off Celso Piña and being as big as the Police's "white reggae".I think it would have to be because a brand new kind of music is created that becomes popular and breaks through to a young, mainstream audience. A kind of music in which the accordion is an integral part. Similar to how rock-and-roll exploded on the scene and brought the electric guitar with it.
That's how instruments become popular: By being the tool required to create the music that is popular. Until then, we'll just be playing a niche instrument, keeping a great tradition alive, and having a good time doing it (even if people poke fun now and then). That's not so bad!
I do a lot of tunes across many eras including some from the past 20 years.Can think of four off hand, but they are four of the best!
Moon kiss's conifers, Thornock
La longue route, Tiersen
The departure, Richter
Air, Hyman