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  2. Why Pigini Accordions Can Cost Almost $40,000 - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/why-pigini-accordions-cost...

    Pigini accordions can have over 12,000 individual pieces, compared to the few hundred in a standard accordion. Each piece is installed by hand, which can take over a year. In that time ...

  3. Accordion reed ranks and switches - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Accordion_reed_ranks_and...

    How many reeds an accordion has is specified by the number of treble ranks and bass ranks. For example, a 4/5 accordion has four reeds on the treble side and five on the bass side. A 3/4 accordion has three reeds on the treble sides and four on the bass side. Reed ranks are classified by either organ 'foot-length' stops or instrument names ...

  4. Chemnitzer concertina - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chemnitzer_concertina

    A Chemnitzer concertina is a musical instrument of the hand-held bellows-driven free-reed category, sometimes called squeezeboxes.The Chemnitzer concertina is most closely related to the bandoneón (German spelling: Bandonion), and more distantly, to the other types of concertinas and accordions.

  5. Accordion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Accordion

    After size, the price and weight of an accordion is largely dependent on the number of reed ranks on either side, either on a cassotto or not, and to a lesser degree on the number of combinations available through register switches. The next, but important, factor is the quality of the reeds, the highest grade called "a mano" (meaning "hand ...

  6. Larry Miller (accordionist) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Larry_Miller_(accordionist)

    His grandson Jay continues to build accordions under the brand "Bon Cajun." [1] [2] In 2003, he estimated he built approximately 85 accordions and repaired 200 – 250 accordions each year. [1] He says each accordion was hand-crafted and took between 160 and 175 hours to make, and he made about 1200 in total. [3]

  7. Bandoneon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bandoneon

    Unlike the piano accordion, but in similar fashion to diatonic free-reed instruments such as the melodeon, Anglo concertina, or harmonica, a given bandoneon button produces different notes on the push and the pull. This means that each keyboard has two layouts: one for opening notes, and one for closing notes.

  8. Cajun accordion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cajun_accordion

    The accordion became more widely adopted during the 1920's as models tuned to C and D appeared, and accordions were able to play with fiddles. [ 2 ] The accordion fell out of favor in the 1930's, as Anglophone country music and Western swing spread into the region, and amplification allowed string bands to project more sound, first utilized by ...

  9. Digital accordion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digital_accordion

    A digital accordion is an electronic musical instrument that uses the control features of a traditional accordion (bellows, bass buttons for the left hand, and a small piano-style keyboard (or buttons) for the right hand, and register switches) to trigger a digital sound module that produces synthesized or digitally sampled accordion sounds or ...