Walker
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Interesting accordion documentary...
Yes this stood out like a sore thumb to me as well. I think she is talking total nonsense, or at least pure undiluted marketing speak! It's like saying the best drivers are those with the most expensive cars.What was it Ludovica believes again? The accordionist is only as good as the instrument they play!
I agree Walker. I too love the traditional sleek look of the mother of pearl keys. Personally, I think it would pair well with a black or white tie concert ensemble.I really like the real mother of pearl buttons on the big chromatic accordions. Shame you can't get them on a piano accordion keyboard. That said, the white keys like on Ludovica Borsatti's instrument in the video looks nice - maybe in the classical scene it is considered good to replicate the looks of the piano, with simple black and white keys.
The "reverse" (not "opposite") is true: "An accordion can only sound as good as the person playing it."Yes this stood out like a sore thumb to me as well. I think she is talking total nonsense, or at least pure undiluted marketing speak! It's like saying the best drivers are those with the most expensive cars.
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this is the most important point for customers to realize and understandAlmost everything else is outsourced to other factories that make the same components for everyone. Think of all keyboard components, reeds, valves, bellows, parts for the bass mechanism, etc., etc... Essentially everything that is not made of wood is made elsewhere.
Some accordions are becoming very much the same. An example: There is the Bugari 540/ARS/C (https://www.bugariarmando.com/en/fisarmonica/540-ars-c-2/) and the Pigini Super Compact (https://www.pigini.com/fisarmoniche/convertor/super-compact/) which are essentially the same instrument. Bugari opted to give this the range C# to E and Pigini E to G but the body is exactly the same and I tried the Pigini years ago at the Frankfurter Musikmesse and I have the Bugari 540. Really, they are the same......
Regarding all accordions being the same nowadays - well perhaps a great many components are similar in a lot instruments, but I can't honestly say I think the final products ever really sound the same. Who thinks a Pigini Sirius sounds the same as a Bugari Prime? Also, Pigini have found a niche in classical music alongside Bugari and a few others. However, I don't think these brands are the most desired for other types of music. Many Jazz or folk players go for completely different names - that must at least have something to do with the sound of the instruments. Just a thought.
You just reminded me of the following joke:I think the accordion, as a mechanical sound-producing device, may have more influence on the results than some other instruments. This may be wildly wrong, but the fiddle and bagpipe players were pissed when anybody could pick up an accordion and produce a note in tune. There seems to be more subtle control of the sound when playing a saxophone for another example. So, maybe (maybe!) the quality of the accordion has more to do with the sound than some other instruments?
Similarly, the tuning of accordions can quickly tell you what styles it might be designed for. An instrument tuned for vallenato doesn't sound like one for Cajun music. So those kind of sound choices are baked into the machine, which is different from say a violin that is greater or lesser quality, and played by better or less skilled players, but the same instrument could be in an orchestra or a folk dance? I'm making this up as I go here.
That said, the quality of the music depends on the player. And a given amount of skill will bring out more from whatever the instrument is. I think it can be a skill to bring that human quality back into the accordion. That's one of the requirements of great players. But, I better practice a lot more before I know for sure.
True to an extent although many manufacturers make the metal parts, bellows, etc themselves and Pigini for example make their own reeds. But yeah, keys, buttons, and other parts etc do tend to be outsourced these days.Interesting yes. The focus on Pigini however suggests that Pigini does some good things others do not. But also the other high-end accordion makers in Castelfidardo (or elsewhere) put in all possible effort to make the best high-end accordions. (The compromises made for lower-end accordions are not considered at all in the video.)
The one thing that gets quite a bit of attention is the "mother of pearl" buttons that are glued on. This is actually one of the main reasons I never want to buy a Pigini because when buttons are glued on it makes repairs to the keyboard almost impossible. (You have to pry off all buttons in order to remove the plate that's underneath. With screw-in buttons this is a lot easier.) And yeah, I do have a Pigini: the bass accordion, because it is the only that's currently available with registers.
There are "only" two major parts that are really important for any accordion maker: the wood for the case and reed blocks and the craftsmanship of the workers in the factory. Almost everything else is outsourced to other factories that make the same components for everyone. Think of all keyboard components, reeds, valves, bellows, parts for the bass mechanism, etc., etc... Essentially everything that is not made of wood is made elsewhere.
I have yet to encounter the first Pigini that has reeds made by Pigini. People want good reeds made by Voci Armoniche, Artigiani Voci, Cagnoni, and perhaps others... Very few accordion manufacturers make their own bellows. What Pigini does make that's metal is their convertor mechanism, at least for some accordions. Almost all Italian accordion makers use a "standard" convertor mechanism they buy (in parts of course) but Pigini designed a convertor that's different from the others.True to an extent although many manufacturers make the metal parts, bellows, etc themselves and Pigini for example make their own reeds. But yeah, keys, buttons, and other parts etc do tend to be outsourced these days.
There was the "Una Storia d'Amore" video in which Pigini showed how accordions are built. They show how the bellows are made, but the video never claimed that this was in house at Pigini. Likewise with the reed production. Again this was not claimed as an in-house process. I have visited the Galassi bellows factory. Considering how fast they can churn out bellows it's clear that any bellows factory can produce many more bellows than any accordion factory can churn out accordions. So an in-house bellows production would be inactive for quite a large fraction of the time, making it not cost-effective to do this in-house.i do recall an earlier video from Pigini showing their in house bellows operation
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