Hi. I wanted to introduce myself. I have been secretly reading this forum for a while and thought it would be good to come out in the open 
Im Dutch from the south of The Netherlands, but living in the north of Japan for a few years now. My wife and I run a European style bakery and bistro in the middle of nowhere while trying to raise our two boys (2 and 4). You are all more then welcome to visit
I am originally a bass player. Mostly contrabass in classical orchestras and in some bands. But when we moved to Japan I had a hard time keep playing bass.
My wife is a professional violin and opera singer and I always wanted to play more together with her. I felt that a free reed instrument would be the easiest and fasted way to get me started. Boy, was I wrong. But in the mean time I fell in love with the sound and timbre of the instruments and now I am hooked.
I started about a year ago with bandoneon (144 einheits) as I believe this is a perfect replacement for cello, viola or bassoon. I like tango, but dont really play it. For me, the bandoneon is a very strong instrument in the classical repertoire. I am now a proud member of the local string quartet and we even had our first concert.
But for lieder, opera and folk I miss the depth, the umpf so to say. So I now try to pick up accordion and I love it. But it also got me very confused. There is just so much variation (piano/button; C vs B. Free vs Stradella. 1 2 3, 4 reeds. Dry musette etc etc) and too much to choose. I found myself a small 60 bass cba of Piermaria.
I am very grateful to this forum; there is no accordion specialist for about 600 km here in North Japan. So this forum is a valuable resource for me to learn how to tune and take care of my instruments myself and connect to fellow accordion players.
Back in The Netherlands I used to run a small recording studio mainly geared towards classical, country and folk. Humbly, I am quite knowledgeable in recording techniques so if I could help out in any way, please dont hesitate to shout out. Or, off topic, anybody is planning to visit Japan and need some hints and tips off the beaten track
Kanpai! Peter.

Im Dutch from the south of The Netherlands, but living in the north of Japan for a few years now. My wife and I run a European style bakery and bistro in the middle of nowhere while trying to raise our two boys (2 and 4). You are all more then welcome to visit

I am originally a bass player. Mostly contrabass in classical orchestras and in some bands. But when we moved to Japan I had a hard time keep playing bass.
My wife is a professional violin and opera singer and I always wanted to play more together with her. I felt that a free reed instrument would be the easiest and fasted way to get me started. Boy, was I wrong. But in the mean time I fell in love with the sound and timbre of the instruments and now I am hooked.
I started about a year ago with bandoneon (144 einheits) as I believe this is a perfect replacement for cello, viola or bassoon. I like tango, but dont really play it. For me, the bandoneon is a very strong instrument in the classical repertoire. I am now a proud member of the local string quartet and we even had our first concert.
But for lieder, opera and folk I miss the depth, the umpf so to say. So I now try to pick up accordion and I love it. But it also got me very confused. There is just so much variation (piano/button; C vs B. Free vs Stradella. 1 2 3, 4 reeds. Dry musette etc etc) and too much to choose. I found myself a small 60 bass cba of Piermaria.
I am very grateful to this forum; there is no accordion specialist for about 600 km here in North Japan. So this forum is a valuable resource for me to learn how to tune and take care of my instruments myself and connect to fellow accordion players.
Back in The Netherlands I used to run a small recording studio mainly geared towards classical, country and folk. Humbly, I am quite knowledgeable in recording techniques so if I could help out in any way, please dont hesitate to shout out. Or, off topic, anybody is planning to visit Japan and need some hints and tips off the beaten track

Kanpai! Peter.