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Irish button accordion: alternatives to 5-note rolls on the offbeat

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  • čas přidán 6. 08. 2024
  • 5-note rolls are an essential technique in Irish box playing, but there are interesting and possibly easier alternatives for beginners (see contents below). Don't hesitate to press "Like" if you find this clip useful - thanks! (Version française : • Accordéon irlandais : ... )
    0:00 Intro - a bit about rolls and their history on the accordion
    1:22 Demonstration of on-beat long rolls on tin whistle
    2:26 Demonstration of off-beat rolls (sometimes called short rolls) on tin whistle
    3:30 Why, instead of playing a long roll on the box, you can safely do nothing!
    4:36 Why you can not do nothing in place of a roll on an off-beat...
    5:34 Rolls on the box - the pros and cons
    8:07 Things (other than rolls) you can use to bring out the off-beat
    9:27 Three notes, one finger
    10:36 The "half-roll" - note, cut-note, note
    11:50 Triplets
    13:29 Finger-swapping - three notes, two fingers
    14:54 Adding a cut to make a finger-swapping half-roll
    16:13 Variation: three notes, first two tied, one finger
    16:55 "Trebles" - one-note triplets

Komentáře • 50

  • @seanoregan998
    @seanoregan998 Před 4 měsíci +1

    I'm just starting out and this is a FABULOUS LESSON!!! THANK YOU!!

  • @debbiemurphy9498
    @debbiemurphy9498 Před rokem

    Another great video. Thanks😀

  • @jakehagelberg5201
    @jakehagelberg5201 Před 6 lety

    Thank you for publishing these videos. Although I play the BC, it’s always very useful to hear a more experienced player’s approach to the box. Love your videos! 👍

  • @Dragonkin7
    @Dragonkin7 Před 6 lety +1

    Thank you for the video! I’ve been having a bit of trouble understanding the 5 note roll and how to really use it, this is a really useful and informative video and I really appreciate you publishing it on CZcams!

  • @Clyens
    @Clyens Před 4 lety

    Thanks, ton of useful tips here. Now I only have to put them into practice!!

  • @shad0wrunner69
    @shad0wrunner69 Před 7 lety +4

    Thank you for the great and thorough instruction on how to do rolls and substitutional ornamentations. I'll start off practicing all these techniques right away :)

    • @Stiamh
      @Stiamh  Před 7 lety

      You are most welcome. Keep it playful...

  • @salvatorerotondo1068
    @salvatorerotondo1068 Před 7 lety

    Excellent lesson. Thank you so much!

  • @JohnzzzView
    @JohnzzzView Před rokem

    Very helpful and insightful instructional video. Thanks for breaking down the techniques for doing rolls on the button box. Thank You very much.

    • @Stiamh
      @Stiamh  Před rokem +1

      Thanks for the comment. I'm really glad you found the vid useful.

  • @owlbear7265
    @owlbear7265 Před 8 lety

    Really fantastic video, thank you for the lesson

  • @anbocmor
    @anbocmor Před 2 lety +1

    Brilliant advice and techniques

    • @srmjo
      @srmjo Před 2 lety

      Thanks for taking the trouble to leave a comment, Seán! I'm happy if you found the video useful.

  • @bouzoukiboy
    @bouzoukiboy Před 8 lety

    Wonderful info for a newbie on the box

  • @commisaro
    @commisaro Před 5 lety

    Wow this was an extremely helpful video -- thanks!

    • @Stiamh
      @Stiamh  Před 5 lety

      Glad to hear it Nicholas, thanks for the comment.

  • @FMeister94
    @FMeister94 Před 7 lety +2

    Thanks for the instructions, I am a very by-ear and I have been away from playing the accordion for so long and I wanna get back into it. So it really helps.

    • @Stiamh
      @Stiamh  Před 7 lety +3

      Good to know you're planning to get back into it, Fionn. The world needs more box players, right?

    • @FMeister94
      @FMeister94 Před 7 lety

      Yeah my black dot is quite unappreciated these days. Need to get back using it again. Yes indeed. :)

  • @IVANBRASIL77
    @IVANBRASIL77 Před 16 dny

    I enjoy your video and it helps me a lot, despide the speed speech

  • @efdiyi
    @efdiyi Před 4 lety

    Thanks a lot for the video! Very well explained!

    • @Stiamh
      @Stiamh  Před 4 lety +1

      Thank you Fernando!

  • @Huh560
    @Huh560 Před 8 lety +2

    Thank you very much for the great videos. Very motivating! (BC player ;))

    • @Stiamh
      @Stiamh  Před 8 lety +1

      +Danny van Geloven Glad to hear it, Danny. B/C is a great system!

  • @giuseppedicello7256
    @giuseppedicello7256 Před 11 měsíci

    Salve! Sarebbe bello anche sentire come giocano anche i bassi gli accordi in questa suonata.grazie!

  • @dmacseain
    @dmacseain Před 3 lety

    thx Steve

  • @barrieglenn8353
    @barrieglenn8353 Před 4 lety

    Getting a bc box, played fiddle and whistle but never a button box, looking forward to the challenge, not sure if I have 12 years left though. Good vid very informative, thanks.

    • @Stiamh
      @Stiamh  Před 4 lety

      You won't need 12 years to get up to speed, Barrie, especially with the experience of other instruments behind you. Just put the time in. I was playing jigs and waltzes with my ceili band within a year. Reels took a bit longer but within 5 years I was able to lead the band. So take heart and enjoy the journey. But... you will need to put the time in. Good luck.

  • @johndally7994
    @johndally7994 Před 8 lety +2

    Thanks for another great video, Stiamh. Have you thought of publishing a tutor for the C#D box?

    • @Stiamh
      @Stiamh  Před 8 lety +3

      You're welcome John. Have I? Yes but not for more than 2 minutes. :)

  • @shawnedwards5369
    @shawnedwards5369 Před rokem

    Okay, who've you ever seen actually "gag" with an F-natural in the roll? I'd actually love to see that pub session video. 🤣

    • @Stiamh
      @Stiamh  Před rokem

      I was too busy wiping up the mess to shoot a video. Sorry about that.

  • @DanielMooreDJ
    @DanielMooreDJ Před 7 lety

    Great to see playing trad in Co.Fermanagh is becoming cool

  • @dia-to
    @dia-to Před 6 lety

    Thanks for your videos!
    Funny that you should refer to accordion as a non-traditional instrument (compared to fiddle or pipes), although "younger", I would tend to see the accordion as a fully traditional instrument, either now or then.

    • @Stiamh
      @Stiamh  Před 6 lety +1

      I suppose I mean that, historically anyway, Irish music accordion players have had to develop a style of playing that fitted in with the esthetics of a tradition developed on other instruments for maybe 100 years before the accordion gained a foothold. This is certainly the case regarding the development of "5-note" rolls. Which sound so much better on a fiddle, a flute, or the pipes! :)

    • @dia-to
      @dia-to Před 6 lety

      Stiamh Ionas Agreed, it's a very interesting thing about accordion, how it tries to imitate earlier instruments (and not just in Irish music).
      On this subject, there was a PhD thesis (history of accordion in Irish music), don't know if you came across, I'll search the reference, just in case.

    • @dia-to
      @dia-to Před 6 lety

      Got it:
      Máire Ní Chaoimh (dir. Mícheál Ó Súilleabháin), Journey into tradition : a social history of the Irish button accordion, University of Limerick, 2010.
      The PDF ought to be available online somewhere.

    • @Stiamh
      @Stiamh  Před 6 lety

      In too many traditions I think the accordion a) changed the music and b) supplanted older instruments. I have had conversations with a Greek piano accordionist and a québécois box player, both of whom regretted aspects of the accordion's dominance in their own tradition. And in the Irish tradition, the accordion's equal-tempered tuning and its inability to bend notes are serious shortcomings!

    • @Stiamh
      @Stiamh  Před 6 lety

      I have it already, thanks!

  • @rogerreygadas-fabela9312

    Don’t they use this type of accordion in merengue tipico from the Dominican Republic?

    • @Stiamh
      @Stiamh  Před 6 lety

      I'm not familiar with the genre but looking around on CZcams it seems that yes, they use this make of accordion and this and similar models. But they wouldn't be tuned the same way. In the Irish systems, the two rows are tuned a semitone apart - B/C or C#/D, mainly - whereas in the rest of the world they are mostly tuned a fourth apart, e.g. G/C, A/D, F/Bb, etc.

    • @Pauetika
      @Pauetika Před 6 lety +1

      Merengue típico accordionists use the Hohner Erica, two rows tuned a fourth apart, mainly Bb/Eb, but also G/C and to a lesser extent A/D. Besides, they retune the two voices of the instrument to obtain a sound with a medium voice and a piccolo voice (8' - 4'), a register called "oboe". I hope this will aid!

  • @croescarlino
    @croescarlino Před 5 lety

    13:14 de negra que bella esta!

  • @bonenfant96
    @bonenfant96 Před 4 lety

    Stiamh je suis d'accord avec tout ce que tu enseigne ............sauf ça. Les rolls sont l’essence de la musique Irlandaise. Il faut les faire.

    • @Stiamh
      @Stiamh  Před 4 lety

      Ben fais-les donc! Attention, je ne dis pas qu'il ne faut pas les faire.
      Moi, je m'en sers beaucoup au violon et à la flûte. À l'accordéon, je dirais qu'il faut savoir les faire. Puis à ce moment-là on a le choix de s'en servir - un peu, beacoup, ou pas du tout! :-) Salut mon ami.

  • @thomasmckenna5372
    @thomasmckenna5372 Před 8 lety

    I Had no idea the button aasordion was Irish

  • @barrypotter3813
    @barrypotter3813 Před 3 lety

    /