Thank you for posting the historical information. I have read it, and as I have said, my interest is not in the instrument per se..but my fathers contributions to its naming, introduction and popularization starting in 1907 America. (I must mention that he also introduced the piano-accordion to the Antipodes, and that is included in the book with photos and newspaper articles from Australia and the Islands of the Pacific.)
You write in capitals that Biaggio Quatrociocche, whom I new well, said that OTHERS were playing the piano accordion at the same time as my father came to America. Biaggio never mentioned who these OTHERS were, and anyway none, if they existed, were playing on stage before my father, or their identities would be known.
Others mentioned in your post, such as Lou Barsuglia, were employed as teachers by my father and personal friends of mine. He and the composer and virtuoso, Galla-Rini, and my cousin, Pietro Deiro Jr. (Lee) contributed their recollections to my narrative. Lee and I became close in our seventies and at one time he would have like me to have moved to New York and taken over the Pietro Deiro Music Publishing Company. He freely admitted his fathers culpability in stealing Guidos thunder. Worse, I discovered that Pietro had been collecting royalties on my fathers compositions for years, and after Lee and I got to know each other, Lee sent me royalty checks till copyrights expired.
I first met Dick Contino when I was ten years old. His father brought him to mine to learn showmanship and stagecraft. I had a life long acquaintance with Dick until he passed away as he lived in Las Vegas near me. When I was a young boy I had aspirations to be a professional player, and Contino showed me how to play Lady of Spain with the bellow shake. Alas, I was so intimidated by my fathers ability ..I gave it up after losing an audition for an RKO-Paramount film.
Thank you for posting the Accordion News letters with their illuminating comments by such famed impresarios as Harry Weber.
I only want to follow my fathers death bed admonition to never forget his musical contributions and to tell the truth about who named the piano-accordion, and was the first to perform on stage, in concert, on records, on radio, and sound on film in the United States of America.
As far as the improvements or modifications. The extended keyboard is wrongly attributed to Art Van Dam who wasnt even born when my father made that modification and you can see it in his 1928 film on YouTube. The addition of the diminished fifth was my fathers improvement along with extended air bars for better bellows control. palm switches, etc.
One famous misrepresentation is that Charles Magnante was the first to play on radio. He was ten years old when my father played the accordion for the first time on the airwaves nationally on the first radio station to air music of any kind in America. Copies of the front page headlines in the Hearst news papers of the day are in the book along with my fathers picture . The headline read by millions: Nation hears the Accordion.
I wrote a novel about the arc of two famous celebrities intertwined lives based on facts and true events..not a biography, or a history in the academic sense.
Guido
History is never made by one person alone.
We all live in communities, and history is the result of social interaction between persons, groups, societies.
The truth is many persons were involved in the introduction and popularisation of the piano-accordion in the USA or in the world.
Guido Deiro certainly was one of them, and a very successfull accordion performer.
Both Guido Deiro and Pietro Deiro played their roles in the piano accordion history of the USA.
Already in 1871, a William D. Edgar of Ottawa, Kansas, USA, patented an improvement of the piano-accordion in America.
You can download the pdf of the patent.
You can see in figures 1 and 2 he uses the whole tone Janko layout (he changes the traditional piano layout of 7 white + 5 black keys, into an equal division of two rows with 6+6 whole tone layout):
https://patents.google.com/patent/US119335?oq=1871+accordion+edgar
http://www.ksanti.net/free-reed/essays/magistrettideiro1.html
quote:
[font=georgia,]Heres an old letter from B. Quattrociocche a pioneer accordion teacher and friend of Guido Deiros who wrote about his experience regarding the piano accordion and the Who Was First controversy. Guido and others were playing piano accordions in America long before Pietro. [/font]
[font=georgia,]It says : Guido AND OTHERS were playing piano accordions in America long before Pietro. [/font]
[font=georgia,]Another quote: [size=medium][font=georgia,]Ive seen ads by Pietro and others, If you know how to play the piano, you know 80% of how to play the piano accordion! What a cruel lie that was for selling lessons and instruments.[/font][/font][/size]
[font=georgia,][size=medium][font=georgia,]Indeed, a cruel lie to sell lessons and instruments. The teacher-dealer mechanism at work...[/font][/font][/size]
[font=georgia,][size=medium][font=georgia,]That is the true history of the accordion in the US of A, the dealers on top...[/font][/font][/size]
Do you also talk about the history of piano accordion manufacturer Augusto Iorio in America?
See the 1907 photo in New York:
http://www.villasantostefano.com/villass/marco_felici/augusto_iorio/index.htm
And what about Giuseppe Galleazzi in San Francisco (1852-1945), and his many USA accordion patents from 1893 to 1913 ?
A very interesting book to read is the one by Gorka Hermosa: The accordion in the 19th century.
Here is the free pdf version of the book.
You can see a picture of a 1853 patent from France on page 26 of this book, and you see the piano keyboard layout.
This has been given names from flutina to accordion, some were without basses, others had two or more basses.
http://www.gorkahermosa.com/web/img/publicaciones/Hermosa - The accordion in the 19th. century.pdf
On page 28 of this book, you can see a photo of a piano accordion, made by Dallapé in 1898.
The 19th century accordion maker Solari from Brussels, Belgium, also made several piano-accordions (some bisonoric, some unisonoric with a traditional piano keyboard layout):
https://www.canardfolk.be/Dossiers/Accordeons/Solari2face.jpg
Here is a gallery of historic Belgian accordions:
https://www.canardfolk.be/Dossiers/Accordeons/