The vibraphone offers a misty rendition of the melody after the accordion, followed by a guitar section senza battuta, and then violin a battuta. |
|
I miss a little of their dialogue as a rowdy French accordion medley assaults my ears. |
|
Their voices are modulated and trailed by a mournful accordion and occasional tablas. |
|
This is the first time an accordion player has been invited to entertain audiences at the event. |
|
There are two bonus remixes of this convincingly poptastic song, which also features a sparky accordion part by Clive Bell. |
|
This astonishing London-based band have fiddles, accordion, trumpet, flute, tambura, guitar and oodles of musical ability and rhythmic energy. |
|
While last year's concert highlighted accordion classics, this season will feature a masterwork for harmonica. |
|
It was Max's grandpa who taught him to play the accordion and speak some Russian. |
|
As the evening progressed, the accordion player moved on from more traditional tales of woe to sing the theme tune from Love Story in Finnish. |
|
The bandoneon is a relative of the accordion and was originally invented as an inexpensive substitute for the church organ. |
|
The erhu, accordion, balafon, flute, marimba, and numerous other cultural instruments, are blended together. |
|
The meal got off to a slightly odd note as a wandering band of minstrels invaded the restaurant and played accordion and guitar loudly. |
|
Salsa without drums and horns, tejano without accordion and guitars, mariachi without trumpets would become something else. |
|
There are certain dogs that sing whenever someone plays an accordion or a harmonica. |
|
She plays tin whistle, Irish flute, concertina, button accordion and keyboards. |
|
It is hoped to bring in tutors for other instruments such as concertina or button accordion should the need arise. |
|
Loretto is a multi-talented musician and composer specialising in tin whistle, flute, concertina and button accordion. |
|
Their lineup includes concertina, accordion, bass, drums, and two trumpets, but they also feature guitars and trombones. |
|
Under the English system the concertina is played like the piano accordion, with the same note being played in both directions, push and pull. |
|
The band has a strong emphasis on vocals and harmony with guitarists, concertina, keyboard, accordion and harmonica backing. |
|
|
All varieties of accordion have been made in both double and single-action models. |
|
A number of special guests will be appearing in the show including the award winning piano accordion player. |
|
The transition proved easy for a man whose original instrument was the piano accordion. |
|
This is the first album by the award-winning young English exponent of the piano accordion. |
|
And joining Sonny will be his long-time musician partner on the piano accordion. |
|
The current music is provided by melodeons and piano accordion and various members would play a drum if there was one to hand. |
|
Some unusual instruments are also included in the ensemble for comical colour, such as the French accordion. |
|
Two noted Hohner accordion players performed this street entertainment at different times in the past, but did not work together. |
|
The tight instrumental work on clarsach, keyboard, fiddle, accordion and pipes is augmented by powerful Gaelic singing. |
|
I also learned to play the violin, the clarinet, the saxophone and the accordion. |
|
People were also smiling at Al, as he trudged up the hill with his accordion on his back and a hogshead of beer at his side. |
|
Their densely packed, cheekily written catalog offers things like Russian microscopes, Cold War-surplus Geiger counters, and accordion halves. |
|
There was much singing and dancing to accordion accompaniment, pleasant until taken over by an overloud PA system. |
|
He plays the accordion and the Styrian traditional harmonica and is a rising star of the European music scene. |
|
Carlos elegantly distills the essence of Peruvian Quecua waltzes usually heard with Pan flutes and cavaquinhos but here played with an accordion. |
|
On the title track, he sounds like a less-mournful Tom Waits amid the accordion bump and grind of a busy cathouse. |
|
In a good way, the harmonium sounds like a French accordion managing to sound bitter, sweet and wry at the same time. |
|
A man playing the accordion entertained us as we noshed on a bacon sandwich and a butter tart on a bench by the water. |
|
In addition to the guitar, the accordion is also played along with many of the traditional folk songs and dances. |
|
As a child, when I played the accordion, our Boston terrier would yodel and scream. |
|
|
His father played the accordion and mouth organ, while a brother and sister played piano, all of them self-taught. |
|
He played violin, accordion, bass fiddle, and he would play any type of music. |
|
It looked like it was a single car that had no hood and two trunks, with an accordion design in the middle. |
|
So all you had to do was play this one piece on the accordion and she'd start to sing. |
|
Shortly after that, my dad took me to downtown Oklahoma City to a little accordion shop. |
|
This track, with its lilting verses and gently lifting accordion phrase, stays in my head, tranquilizing me. |
|
I wondered what powered it, since it didn't have a bellows like an accordion or pipe organ, and he didn't seem to be blowing into it. |
|
Shepherd's normal programme is a wonderful mix of button and piano accordion, toe-tapping fiddle and drums. |
|
Larry played the two row accordion, the tin whistle, the silver flute, and the clarinet. |
|
Soon the sounds of tuning instruments filled the afternoon, then the accordion warbled out its organ-like notes. |
|
Another veteran Etoiles hero, Syran Mbenza, adds in the gently rousing guitar solos, while horns, violin and accordion provide the backing. |
|
Cardboard strips can also be curved, folded in accordion fashion, and coiled for a wide variety of effects. |
|
A recent solo exhibition at Mixed Greens featured two drawings in accordion books. |
|
Exceedingly tall and gaunt with a long, prognathous jaw, he never took his eyes from me as he went over to an accordion wilted across a stool. |
|
She demonstrates the accordion binding of Hiddenness by opening the book to stand on its own as a kind of folding canvas. |
|
Only the prototype for accordion garage doors, which form the entire facade on the south side, can be called a luxury item. |
|
These accordion style doors have the advantages of no tracks to trip over or keep clean. |
|
Strange but heartening that the double bill of country rock and solo accordion went over better than we might have expected. |
|
Use cloth napkins, fold them into accordion pleats and place them in the water glasses. |
|
You might even want to throw in some fancier accordion pleats or other folds to make your shapes come to life. |
|
|
The PV array blanket is folded in an accordion style before placement in a canister. |
|
No children defying their parents and pulling things off the shelves and no scary women with accordion folders full of coupons. |
|
A white sporting jacket with a thick, accordion collar over a brown sweater and a white sailing shirt. |
|
Another format of Japanese books are accordion structures with a few variations. |
|
Repeated a few times, it has an accordion effect and adds several minutes to the journey. |
|
Purchase a plastic accordion folder and create tabs for each of the children you babysit. |
|
For example, to keep her papers in order, would she work best with a binder or an accordion file? |
|
Fold one side one inch back and continue in an accordion fashion until you have one strip of tissue about one inch across. |
|
This extract comes from a radiophonic piece about accordion players in Western Australia. |
|
The melodeon or German accordion is a single-action button accordion, very popular for folk music. |
|
In the band Franco played all types of music on the accordion from Russian folk music to Beatles hits. |
|
In the 1990s, the influence of Western pop music and of new native pop music in a folkish style, played on the accordion, became apparent. |
|
The accordion player played for the children as they wound their colourful ribbons round the maypole. |
|
The centre-half forward, as much a wizard with an accordion as a caman, thundered the ball away from MacNiven and it sailed into the net. |
|
These are songs built around a yearning violin, a plucky banjo riff or an accordion sigh. |
|
The warm, glowing drone of Oliveros' accordion breathes its way through a patchwork of chimes and the gentle fluting of the whistlebuoys. |
|
Sharon is of course a multi instrumentalist in her own right, playing melodeon, piano accordion and fiddle. |
|
A typical cumbia is performed with a male singer backed by a male chorus, drums, electric guitar and bass, and either a brass section or an accordion. |
|
He had skinny legs and bloated ribs fanning from his torso like an accordion strapped to his chest. |
|
The questions presented by the lower folds in the accordion are economic and social. |
|
|
A straight-faced clown in severe white makeup begins picking out a tune on an accordion as more people trickle in to watch. |
|
To save these pieces he folded the paper accordion style, and from that came the idea of making even sized rectangles one under the other on each pleat. |
|
She was nervously folding the fabric of her shirt into accordion folds. |
|
There's one guy who gets on the tube with an accordion, while his son, in tattered rags, goes up and down the aisles with a Pringles can to collect spare change. |
|
The trio brings appropriate whimsy to Gorey's playfully macabre material, an accordion main soundtrack to besotted mothers and weeping chandeliers. |
|
There's a brief accordion intro, leading to what sounds like a kazoo lament accompanied by someone scraping a few pieces of metal and wood together. |
|
Jim, a pupil of Smithy Bridge School, is not only a highly accomplished drummer owning his own drum kit, but also plays the xylophone, timpani, piano and accordion. |
|
As the tambour was a spurned instrument, only the triangle could bring a strong support destined to accentuate the rhythms of the accordion dance. |
|
What are required are accordion players, drummers and majorettes. |
|
By the age of 4, he was able to play the balalaika, accordion, and guitar, and by 8, the oboe as well as the trombone and other brass instruments. |
|
Last Round is for double string quartet and double bass, written in memory of Piazzolla, and conceived as an idealized version of his keyless accordion, the bandoneon. |
|
After picking up his first batch of 200 euros from a bank machine on New Year's day, Schroeder tossed a two-euro coin into an accordion player's basket. |
|
Out of the corner of my eye I saw a dozen musicians climb on stage with no less than 15 instruments, including bass trombone, accordion, pedal steel guitar, saw and theremin! |
|
He also showed the audience the differences between the accordion and the melodeon the main one being the accordion has keys and the melodeon buttons for the notes. |
|
The music becomes a dense, intricate concoction enriched by electronic elements, melodica, glockenspiel, accordion, trumpet, viola, pump organ, and banjo. |
|
Anyone between the ages of 7 and 70 are welcome to come along and learn to play the tin whistle, button or piano accordion at 7pm each Friday evening. |
|
The racist suspicions of the French toward Mediterraneans underlay the eventual ironic triumph of Italian accordion music as the defining Parisian sound of hal musette. |
|
On their latest album, you will hear guitar, banjo, piano, musical saw, accordion, autoharp, and melodica as well as a mismatched array of mostly live cymbals and drums. |
|
The seven young musicians play an exciting assortment of instruments including bodhran, accordion, bouzouki, guitar, bass, fiddle, Asturian bagpipes and flute. |
|
It's accordion, soprano sax, clarinet, bass, banjo and percussion. |
|
|
Sheamie was a gifted piano and accordion player and had his own modern dance band that provided entertainment to many of his old friends far and near. |
|
Many thanks to Joe who has donated a piano accordion to the school band. |
|
Randy Krajewski, who plays accordion, bass, concertina, and piano and sings, appears to be the driving force behind this homage, and the band pulls it off nearly flawlessly. |
|
This tradition is still at the heart of their music, with the female voices front-lining the instrumental textures of fiddle, guitars, accordion, bass and percussion. |
|
Strong radiating ribs are common in this group, and there are generally very strong plications or accordion like folds on the sulcus of the shell. |
|
In his later teens, he became intoxicated by the accordion styles of the great press and draw players, notably Joe Cooley, Jackie Daly and Tony McMahon. |
|
Professional woodwind players such as flautists, clarinettists, oboists are in general more skilled in this regard than violinists, pianists and accordion players. |
|
The Opera Ensemble, arranged and conducted by Byron Olson, is comprised of a variety of woodwinds, a French horn, voice, accordion, bass, and drums. |
|
Most tracks feature accordion, several bounce along on a jaunty Colombian cumbia rhythm, and others evoke the reggae and ska of UK two-tone bands. |
|
They certainly haven't ignored technology, but the use of instruments like banjo, accordion, glockenspiel and pump organ enhances the weathered folk feel of the music. |
|
For her second solo CD, the local multi-instrumentalist has produced a grand record featuring everything from glockenspiel and saw to accordion, and even tuba. |
|
Our four talented actor-musicians show their versatility by playing a dozen instruments including cello, violin, euphonium, guitar, trumpet and accordion. |
|
There's a wheeze of accordion and deep, dulcet electric guitar. |
|
Just one listen to the sweet dobro and accordion peeking through the unabashedly tender song and you realize that he is still as much of a romantic as ever. |
|
Accompanying Kate and Damien on tour are double bass player Duncan Lyall, Stevie Byrnes on bouzouki and Nick Cooke on the diatonic accordion. |
|
Founding member Blair Douglas joined the band onstage, playing accordion on several numbers. |
|
Instruments such as button accordion and concertina made their appearances in Irish traditional music late in the 19th century. |
|
The work is for twelve singers, large mixed choir, children choir, accordion, dancer and electronics sounds. |
|
The accordion is a free reed instrument and is in the same family as other instruments such as the sheng and khaen. |
|
Other accordions, such as the diatonic button accordion, have only a single shoulder strap and a right hand thumb strap. |
|
|
See the accordion reed ranks and switches article for further explanation and audio samples. |
|
The most typical accordion is the piano accordion, which is used for many musical genres. |
|
A disreputable accordion that had a leak somewhere and breathed louder than it squawked. |
|
Similar to a violin's bow, the production of sound in an accordion is in direct proportion to the motion of the player. |
|
The piano accordion is the official city instrument of San Francisco, California. |
|
Unfortunately, I was unable to bring my other guitar player 'Cactus' Jim Soldi and my accordion player Sharon Whyte. |
|
Additionally, the accordion is also used in cajun, zydeco, jazz music and in both solo and orchestra performances of classical music. |
|
The accordion is widely used in Brazil, in traditional as well as pop music. |
|
Though often derided as Scottish kitsch, the accordion has long been a part of Scottish music. |
|
But, over the years, there have been versions transcribed for strings, cimbalom and even accordion. |
|
But, over the years, there have been versions for strings, cimbalom and even accordion. |
|
Saxophonist Eric SAva will be accompanied by Jean-Philippe Viret on double bass and Didier Irthursarry on accordion. |
|
Like the button key accordion, a new playing style has emerged with a dry tuning, lighter style of playing and a more rhythmically varied bass. |
|
Modern Irish accordion players generally prefer the 2 row button accordion. |
|
The mermaid-silhouette skirt featured the same lavish beading and tiers of accordion pleats which climaxed in an accordion-pleated train. |
|
Tailored vests were presented over flowing accordion pleats and enough velvet to make even summer devotees look forward to winter. |
|
Papino, the white clown, reappears, now without his accordion. |
|
We live in an accordion economy, as I'm not the first to say. |
|
Also included in the shows was an acoustic set, with Mike Lindup playing the accordion. |
|
My dad did assist and helped get the accordion recognised for O-grade exams. |
|
|
She plays piano accordion and drums, and at 18 she was National Mod champion, later taking up singing. |
|
But his musical roots stretched back to his schooldays when he learned to play the piano accordion. |
|
When I first went to Paris, I fell in love with the serenading of the piano accordion by the River Seine. |
|
And she has just acquired a banjo, to add to her guitar, organ, piano, piano accordion, diatonic accordion, harmonica, mandolin and tin flute. |
|
He learned to play the piano as a young child and later played the organ and piano accordion. |
|
The accordion also began to be a central instrument at Highland balls and dances. |
|
She was influenced by her fellow Chicanos Los Lobos who also use the music of the accordion. |
|
The accordion is also a traditional instrument in Colombia, commonly associated with the vallenato and cumbia genres. |
|
Piazzolla performed on the bandoneon, but his works can be performed on either bandoneon or accordion. |
|
Other notable composers have written for the accordion during the first half of the 20th century. |
|
The first composer to write specifically for the chromatic accordion was Paul Hindemith. |
|
In the late 1950s and early 1960s, the accordion declined in popularity due to the rise of rock 'n' roll. |
|
An instrument called accordion was first patented in 1829 by Cyrill Demian, of Armenian origin, in Vienna. |
|
The accordion is one of several European inventions of the early 19th century that used free reeds driven by a bellows. |
|
By the 1860s, Novgorod, Vyatka and Saratov Governorates also had significant accordion production. |
|
She plays keyboards, guitar, mandolin, bass, accordion, West African djimbe, as well as such traditional Indian instruments as the mridunga, tabla and harmonium. |
|
Another important instrument is the sheng, pipes, an ancient instrument that is ancestor of all Western free reed instruments, such as the accordion. |
|
Also a keen musician, he started by entertaining at the Down Under club, a haven for ex-pat Australians and New Zealanders, playing his piano accordion. |
|
Then smiles all round for Gardel's foot-tapping exotic Tango featuring piano accordion, plus Nicola's violinist sister Stephanie, joining the merry band. |
|
Crawled Out Of The Sea adds accordion and a snare riff, Tap At My Window is based on a Philip Larkin poem and Night Terror is a stirring call-to-arms. |
|
|
Her instrument was piano accordion, which she played very well. |
|
The earliest history of the accordion in Russia is poorly documented. |
|
The sheng and khaen are both much older than the accordion and this type of reed did inspire the kind of free reeds in use in the accordion as we know it today. |
|
The music starts 8pm with support from Nuneaton line-up Dragonhead, specialists in footstomping folk on guitars, bouzouki and accordion with a touch of Cajun. |
|
The instruments they play include piano, violin, guitar, cello, uilleann pipes, flute, mandolin, banjo, accordion, fiddle, Dobro, bass, whistle and drums. |
|
The manufacture of an accordion is only a partly automated process. |
|
An accordion plays like a portative organ continuo, hocket-ing wind instruments evoke period vocalisations, and contrasts of effect bring continual surprises. |
|
Teodore Anzellotti provided a constantly brooding accordion presence while Christa Schoenfeldinger mesmerised with her performance on the glass harmonica. |
|
Ronnie was not really the kind of chap to do compering, but he put a lot of work into it, booked the guest artists and travelled to other accordion clubs to visit them. |
|
The accordion is a traditional instrument in Bosnia and Herzegovina. |
|
Inside the accordion are the reeds that generate the instrument tones. |
|
Kachupada is the latest studio album by Cape Verdean music artist Carmen Souza, along with band members on the piano, percussion, bongos, accordion, guitar, and saxophone. |
|
There is a wide range of instruments that are called accordion. |
|
Today, native versions of the name accordion are more common. |
|
During the 1950s through the 1980s the accordion received significant exposure on television with performances by Myron Floren on The Lawrence Welk Show. |
|
Jeune's flutina resembles Wheatstone's concertina in internal construction and tone color, but it appears to complement Demian's accordion functionally. |
|
Combination inserts combine a straight-sided design with a band of accordion pleats to accommodate both drum height variations and follower-plate use. |
|
Many conservatories in Europe have classical accordion departments. |
|
Don't let the accordion, fiddle and scrubboard fool you, Donna the Buffalo's danceable music with reggae and rock roots has a socially conscious message. |
|