M
maugein96
Guest
I know Ive spoken about this before, but for some reason CBA players in Bologna prefer to do most of their playing on the draw, and shunt the bellows closed at every opportunity to achieve that. Ive watched several CBA players from the area on You Tube, and they never make use of the air button to close the bellows. If I try that on any of my boxes, the bellows resist any attempt to force them closed like that.
Edmondo Comandini on the sistema francesa Cooperfisa (French style stepped mushroom bass buttons and treble couplers behind the treble keyboard), rarely plays much at all on the push, like many CBA players from that area.
Roberto Scaglioni on the Ropa PA seems to want to do the same but is hampered by the bigger instrument, so he compresses the bellows at the top to get a faster return.
Has anybody come across this particular bellows technique before? It may not be unique to Bologna, but most pro CBA players there seem to make use of it.
Ropa was a small manufacturer of top quality accordions in Bologna, but I believe they are now defunct.
Tune is Fuego, an old Bolognese tango.
In case you thought I was imagining things, here is Tiziano Ghinazzi doing the same, albeit in a more subtle fashion. I could post more clips of other players, as there is quite a number of them who use the same technique. I know hes not playing the basses. Relatively few Italian players now bother with the basses when they are part of a band.
Edmondo Comandini on the sistema francesa Cooperfisa (French style stepped mushroom bass buttons and treble couplers behind the treble keyboard), rarely plays much at all on the push, like many CBA players from that area.
Roberto Scaglioni on the Ropa PA seems to want to do the same but is hampered by the bigger instrument, so he compresses the bellows at the top to get a faster return.
Has anybody come across this particular bellows technique before? It may not be unique to Bologna, but most pro CBA players there seem to make use of it.
Ropa was a small manufacturer of top quality accordions in Bologna, but I believe they are now defunct.
Tune is Fuego, an old Bolognese tango.
In case you thought I was imagining things, here is Tiziano Ghinazzi doing the same, albeit in a more subtle fashion. I could post more clips of other players, as there is quite a number of them who use the same technique. I know hes not playing the basses. Relatively few Italian players now bother with the basses when they are part of a band.