philipchevron wrote:James's virtousity tends to be on the keyboard side of the piano-accordion and he rarely uses the left hand - the chordal buttons. The accompaniment buttons on piano-accordions tend to be superfluous when the instrument is played as part of a band, as their function is to provide bass and/or chords, which may already be coming from elsewhere in the band's arrangement. James uses the "drone" buttons only for an effect, as in the intro to "The Old Main Drag" for example.
I know very little about button-accordions or "squeeze boxes" but I believe it to be true that their harmonic range is limited. However, as the work of the great Sharon Shannon illustrates, that need not be a limitation and the restriction may even add to creativity.
But you do need to get an accordion player, if only in a music shop, to go through these options with you before deciding which type of instrument is for you.
Thanks for the info Philip. You were spot on. I ended finding a used piano-accordion and found a great teacher. My first reason for getting the piano accordion was that everyone I knew and all the teachers I could find were all piano accordionists. I'm no musical prodigy, so I knew I would need a teacher. The second reason for getting the piano accordion was that I learned (after only a bit of research) that the diatonic accordion squeeze boxes play different notes depending on whether the bellows are being pushed or pulled. With my weak musical skills I didn't think I would be able to wrap my mind around that as easily as a piano accordion.
I had the (exciting for me) opportunity to talk to Matt Hensley (Accordion player for Flogging Molly) for a while about accordions, and he basically reaffirmed my suspicions regarding the diatonic accordions. He has one and says that is more mentally challenging than the piano accordion and relies on you knowing a bit more about music theory. You were right about them having a limited harmonic range, so you also have to understand the limitations and possibilities (which I don't really comprehend yet). He suggested that once I find a used one after I have been playing the piano accordion for a while and have more musical knowledge, and then see which one I like the sound of better.
Hopefully I'll be squeez'n out some Pogues tunes some day. My teacher is a retired professional accordion player. I took her some Pogues CDs today actually, and she can amazingly just start playing them for me. It's really great. She especially liked Kitty.
The accordion on Red Roses For Me and Run Sodomy & The Lash is my absolute favorite. I wish I could figure out exactly what accordion James played for those. He mentioned something about Soprani on Rum Sodomy & The Lash, but it seems that there are various Soprani brands (e.g., Paolo Soprani, E. Soprani, G. Soprani, Fratelli Soprani, Settimio Soprani, etc.

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