Welcome to old and new friends who are interested in discussing Cajun and other diatonic accordions, along with some occasional lagniappe....



CAJUN ACCORDION DISCUSSION GROUP

 

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Re: Opinions...Accordion Players

All excellent thoughts :-)

As long as we're discussing the topic, the music and culture remains
alive and growing :-)

--bn

Re: Opinions...Accordion Players

Ganey,
I believe you nailed it at "technicality vs. emotion." Many modern accordion players can outdo Ardoin and Le Jeune in fancy playing, but they gotta have soul. Listen to Nathan Abshire playing "Ma Negresse" otherwise politically correctly known as , Pine Grove Blues. Very simple song but played straight from the heart. N'est pas?

Re: Opinions...Accordion Players


What Ganey said. Though I personally consistently gravitate to Amede(Ardoin and Breaux), Octa, and Iry, mainly because I'm fascinated with their style and vocals, which is dripping with emotion, I also know that though each had some original recordings, none were originators of Cajun music. That's where I always chuckle when the word "traditional" pops up. We relate "traditional" as early recordings, but what was recorded in those early years was just the personal spin those old guys were putting on the music they had, not so much a snapshot into some ancient untouched music that has since been bent and reshaped. Cajun music has never not been changed to some degree by the person playing it.

That being said, there are some elements to the styles of many old players that i find few doing today. At some point, playing skill seems tied to fancy fingers and crazy licks, and reliance on the accompaniment of multi-instrument bands, but what I find so appealing about some of the old players is their ability to place pauses in the right places, and dragging out notes in the right places, and their masterful use of the base side. And that is the part I find so hard to duplicate.

Either myself, or many others misunderstood Jacinto, what I understood him to say, I agree with, that new players should take a listen to these old timers, not necessarily only to them, to get a more rounded feel for Cajun music. We could go on and on for days (and have) over who to include in the should also listen to category.

Re: Opinions...Accordion Players

Bryan,

Skill coupled with emotion is what all musicians are striving for.
If you listen to and watch Alex Meixner play the piano accordion,
you gotta say, "Man, that Dude has soul!"
He puts so much of himself into his music, plus he knows What he is doing.
It don't matter if you're playing the sax, the piano, the harmonica, or whatever.
you gotta put the human experiences of love, sorrow, hate, fear and joy into that music.
But, as you know, you still gotta practice and listen, practice and listen, practice and listen.
And let's face it. Some of us will never really get there, Yours Truly included. But it sure is fun to keep trying.
By the way, Jacinto is looking for a buy on a Cajun accordion. Aren't we all.
JB

Re: Opinions...Accordion Players

Bryan, as for emotion expressed and received; i've been playing with and listening to musicians a lot, mainly in the folk domain. Now and then you'll meet one of those magical entertaining performers who can really connect with your soul when they do their thing. It can be that they are real virtuosos, but also quite simple down to earth players, or even a story teller like a farmer i met in a rural Irish village pub years ago. But on all counts they draw you in to their magic like honey draws a bear, even when you know you'll get stinged sometimes. A mechanism Mao and Hitler too used for their nasty goals?

Even after their passing their soul's imprint on us all seems to linger on like the stickiest glue residue ever. Recordings, reputation, magic? Had an old aunt who told me she saw auras; from a great stage performer she mentioned she could see them mingle with those of an audience, uniting in colors. PS call me crazy if you like, but you'll not be the first, hehe. - nout

Re: Opinions...Accordion Players

Music is like beer and dogs.

One person may think it is the best ever produced while another my find it just so-so.

Rarely do we droll over every cut on a given CD; though some tracks may jump out at us, others may be just okay.



Jamey Hall's most excellent Cajun Accordion Music Theory

Brett's all new Cajun Accordion Music Theory for all keys!

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