Mike K said:
Well as I said....just starting. I have a few jobs lined up but not exactly pulling in large amounts of cash.
Gotcha. The start is always the hardest.
Mike K said:
I looked at that exact pre amp...thought it might be worth a try. Would need two though, since mine is stereo.
Are you sure you would need two? Is your amp a 2-channel stereo amplifier with 2 separate external speakers? If not, what you need instead is probably just an adapter where you tie the 2 channels in to one mono channel, place that into the preamp and the preamp outputs to the amplifier! Total cost of something like that is maybe $5 and 15 minutes with a soldering iron.
Mike K said:
Sounds like your condensor mic solution had the problem I am seeing.
Yes, Electret mics last around 10 years at most, and start to slowly fail at around the 5 year mark. To replace the mics, if they are totally dead is not expensive, however, they still always put out a very low signal that the preamp boost up.
Mike K said:
I have a 100 watt amp and it gets me enough sound. It is HEAVY. I wanted to use a smaller one but it just does not appear to have the volume capability for the accordion although it does fine on my piano.
Two thoughts here, if you are at the volume you need, but the amp is at or near full volume, thats no issue. If you are not getting the full volume from the amp even at full volume, the signal is very low... that preamp is going to boost it and make it a good amount louder. That way you can probably get maximum volume at a much lower setting on the amp.
I basically have 3 systems available to me. First is my full proper setup with dual Bose 802 speakers, stands, 16 channel mixer, external reverb, two arrangers/backing modules, 500 watt amp, a ton of other things and a rack and table for it all. Its about 225-250 pounds and takes about 60-90 minutes to setup and adjust in a new location. The sound is incredible, but it is very complex, heavy and long to setup and break-down.
For the times that I need to fill a smaller room/hall for something smaller like between 100-125 people, I have (by coincidence more than design), an all Roland setup. Starts with the FR-8X V-accordion, to the Roland BK-7m backing module out to a Roland JC-160 amp with 120 watts powering 4X10 drivers... strong enough to handle this kind of environment easily enough, but I lose a bit of sound quality and I lose the stereo image. Here is what that looks like:
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It is very portable, but still quite heavy at around 75-85 pounds, but it just rolls around and takes me a whole 3 minutes to set up and start playing!
Now, the small setup that I just completed today (a few minutes ago, as a matter of fact! :lol: )... it comes from an idea that someone else has already done, and I wanted to try it out. It cost me absolutely nothing except some time to make an adapter. I had everything to make it already (solder, connectors, tape, etc.), and I just finished testing it out. This setup was brought up to me as an idea that another fellow V-accordion user had. Basically what he did was use a small 4-channel mixer and hook up to one of those computer speakers, the stronger ones with a subwoofer. I have one of those too, it cost me about $50 on special from Best Buy last year (Altec Lansing brand, so not total garbage, but not Klipsch either... lol). Because the BK-7m arranger has a stereo input, I plug the MIDI cable and the stereo cable from the 8X in to the BK and the 2 stereo outputs from the BK send everything to the stereo input of the computer speaker via my free adapter. It looks like this:
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Now, this is surprisingly good for the time and money invested. The fact that it offers a stereo sound and is actually loud enough for about a 25-40 people sized room is quite impressive. The best part is it is super portable, were talking about 25 pounds, and that includes the pedals, BK-7m and accordion! If anything, Id build a couple of small light speaker stands for the small satellites to separate them and give a better stereo image, but I was surprised at how well this worked. Imagine if I had spent something like $200 for a stronger speaker setup, this could be quite impressive and perfect for medium sized rooms and busking!
Mike K said:
I have started mostly with Farmers Markets, playing for tips. So far the few I played were encouraging. I tried busking on the street and that was not enjoyable....tooonoisy and poor response. Might have to find different locations.
Thats what they all say... its all about three things... location, location, location!

Thats cool that you play for tips (though Id not call that being a professional). This is a great way to make some extra beer money and have a great time in the process. At the same time, you are building relationships and over time might be able to build a nice list of clientele where you play, and get paid a more fair amount.
Mike K said:
Retirement is about a year off though, so hopefully I can expand.
What a great idea and sounds like a lot of fun too!
Mike K said:
Accordion appears to be so far out nowadays that it is back in. Getting pretty good response from people so far. So many people have never heard one played live.
You know what, every time I read about a small accordion success story, it makes me smile. Anything and everything that we can do to promote the accordion is another ounce of prevention that helps this instrument survive a little longer. Well done!
