Alan Sharkis
Prolific poster
I’m 83. I’ve been playing PA on and off since I was seven or eight. Some years ago, I found a teacher who was incredible, and I can say that because I spent over thirty-three years teaching kids of all ages in all subjects. My accordion teacher and I parted ways, however, about nine months ago. The reason for the split had nothing to do with music. Since then, I played sporadically, and with little enthusiasm. I needed something that was new to me.
I have an acoustic accordion and an AxE-Cordion, both strictly Stradella bass. But I also have a Roland FR-4x, which is capable of doing not only 2-4 Stradella and a bunch of 3-3 Stradella layouts, but also five free-bass layouts. The free-bass seemed to me what I was looking for, but which layout? The choices boiled down to either quint (which Roland calls ‘Fifth’) or C-system (which Roland calls ‘minor third’ for obvious reasons.)
I read that starting quint after doing Stradella would be easy and familiar, but it had some shortcomings down the road. On the other hand, C-system seemed to be a very logical system on paper, and if I live long enough, I reasoned, would make transition to a C-Griff CBA an easy choice.
So, I found a pdf of the Ellegaard method on line and started to work with it yesterday. Guess what? it gave me the motivation to not only learn C-system free-bass, but at the press of a button, I could go back to Stradella and continue to review my PA playing. Today, I’m ready for more of both.
I see that many of you have posted practice materials or sources of materials for free-bass. While I’m not ready for them yet, I want to thank you in advance for posting them and I’ll be sure to take advantage of them when the time comes.
I have an acoustic accordion and an AxE-Cordion, both strictly Stradella bass. But I also have a Roland FR-4x, which is capable of doing not only 2-4 Stradella and a bunch of 3-3 Stradella layouts, but also five free-bass layouts. The free-bass seemed to me what I was looking for, but which layout? The choices boiled down to either quint (which Roland calls ‘Fifth’) or C-system (which Roland calls ‘minor third’ for obvious reasons.)
I read that starting quint after doing Stradella would be easy and familiar, but it had some shortcomings down the road. On the other hand, C-system seemed to be a very logical system on paper, and if I live long enough, I reasoned, would make transition to a C-Griff CBA an easy choice.
So, I found a pdf of the Ellegaard method on line and started to work with it yesterday. Guess what? it gave me the motivation to not only learn C-system free-bass, but at the press of a button, I could go back to Stradella and continue to review my PA playing. Today, I’m ready for more of both.
I see that many of you have posted practice materials or sources of materials for free-bass. While I’m not ready for them yet, I want to thank you in advance for posting them and I’ll be sure to take advantage of them when the time comes.