Is my question accurate in that there is sometimes a common sentiment that the German-made reeds are inferior in some respects to the Italian ones?
I am not asking this to question the sentiment, but to understand the reasons for why they are considered inferior.
What are we comparing here?
Is it a matter of how they've held up over time compared to Italian reeds from the same time?
Were they more prone to breaking or going out of tune compared to similar Italian instruments?
Is it with regard to playability, such as weaker response and using more air?
Is it based on sound preference? Would the sound have been consider superior/inferior for certain genres or audiences in the actual time periods they were used?
Anything else?
Am I reading too much into a few comments at different accordion forums?
I haven't specially gone out and tried to find samples of music played on German reeds versus Italian reeds. If there is a big difference, then I plead innocence.
I am not asking this to question the sentiment, but to understand the reasons for why they are considered inferior.
What are we comparing here?
Is it a matter of how they've held up over time compared to Italian reeds from the same time?
Were they more prone to breaking or going out of tune compared to similar Italian instruments?
Is it with regard to playability, such as weaker response and using more air?
Is it based on sound preference? Would the sound have been consider superior/inferior for certain genres or audiences in the actual time periods they were used?
Anything else?
Am I reading too much into a few comments at different accordion forums?
I haven't specially gone out and tried to find samples of music played on German reeds versus Italian reeds. If there is a big difference, then I plead innocence.