enow.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: hohner accordion models history

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Hohner - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hohner

    Hohner "Super Chromonica"; case marked "No.260 1/2" (model); images top-to-bottom show the case top, harmonica top, case bottom, and harmonica bottom/obverse. The Chromonica, no longer in production, contained forty reeds and played 2½ full chromatic octaves. This was the original Hohner chromatic model, available until recently in C or G. [18]

  3. 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 ...

  4. Cassotto - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cassotto

    Especially famous are the Beltuna, Pigini, Bugari and Öllerer models. In traditional German accordion making, the cassotto barely plays a role. One can find only a few cassotto registers in German accordions, but they can be found in the Hohner Morino and Gola models, and the Harmona (Klingenthal) Cassotta, Supra & Supita models.

  5. Sonny Brogan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sonny_Brogan

    He originally played on a single-keyed Hohner melodeon, and later the two-row Paolo Soprani (pictured) which he used until he died. [5] [7] Sonny's Paolo Soprani was one of the rarest, the grey model, made in 1948, when the company still made them by hand. Offaly-born button box player Paddy O'Brien currently has Sonny's accordion. [8]

  6. Free-bass system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free-bass_system

    Thus this Hohner company decided to enlarge the market for accordions [notes 1] by turning the instrument from its traditional music roots into an established instrument for orchestras. [12] An orchestra was put together, touring Germany to introduce the new concept. The company also supplied sheet music for this new type of accordion. [12]

  7. Claviola - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Claviola

    Because the bellows are absent in both the claviola and the melodica, they are sometimes called, circumcised accordions. In combination with the pipes, the claviola uses reeds blown from the "wrong" side compared to reeds in most Western free-reed instruments, resulting in a much mellower, less reedy tone, and pitch dependent on the pipe length.

  8. VEB Klingenthaler Harmonikawerke - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VEB_Klingenthaler_Har...

    [1] 125,578 accordions were produced there in 1961 alone, which were exported to more than 40 countries. In 1964 VEB Vermona was incorporated into Klingenthaler Harmonikawerke. [ 2 ] In 1972 a further 17 companies with state holdings were converted into state-owned companies and incorporated into VEB Klingenthaler Harmonikawerke (for example F ...

  9. C. A. Seydel Söhne - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C._A._Seydel_Söhne

    Soloist Pro - This model is similar to the Hohner Marine Band 1896, but with rounded holes and screws. Soloist Pro 12 Steel - This model is similar to the Hohner SBS. However, this model has 12 holes instead of 14 is available in Low C, Low D, C, and A. The idea is that one gets a low octave under the standard diatonic.

  1. Ads

    related to: hohner accordion models history