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1913 Italian ACCORDION PIETRO DEIRO Alessandro STRADELLA OVERTURE VICTOR 35345

Description: Shipping: All items will be packed safely in a sturdy package for safe shipping.We ship internationally and offer combined shipping for multiple purchases. Expedited, Priority Mail and FedEx shipping available Once payment is received, we ship your item on the next business day.INTERNATIONAL BUYERS: Pls check the shipping tab. Ebay does not display cheapest shipping on top of the listing. Over 1000 Records available. If you plan to buy several records: Click the "ADD TO CART" button. Once you have selected all the records you want, go to Cart and check out. COMBINED SHIPPING will be applied automatically. If shipping seems high: In Cart click REQUEST TOTAL, and I will send you an invoice. A series of great Italian Humor and Popular Records, Sicilian and Neapolitan dialects, Fascist Songs from early G&Ts to World War II recordings on 78 rpm Victrola RecordsClick this link for more Italian Records in my other listings! Pietro DeiroThe Italian born Deiro Brothers are considered the Fathers of American Accordion playing. These records always have stunning acoustics and great musicality, on early acoustic Here in a Latin/ Italian orchestral piece played on the AccordionBridal rose overture Rosa de boda Calixa Lavalle´e (composer) Alessandro Stradella. OuvertureFriedrich von Flotow (composer)Pietro Deiro (instrumentalist : accordion) Description: Accordion solo11/21/1913 Camden, New Jersey Victor 35345 Orig issue Victor Batwing 12" 78 rpm record LOUD AND PRESENTCondition: Better than EXCELLENT PRISINTE plays E+ NOISELESSA CHOICE COPYThe Deiro Brothers The brothers Guido and Pietro Deiro were undoubtedly the two most important piano accordionists in America during the first decades of the twentieth century. Guido (1886-1950) was the eldest of the two, and the first to enter into a career in music.Guido Deiro's Royal Method for the Piano Accordion (Nicomede Music, Altoona, Pennsylvania, 1936) provided a short biographical sketch of the first star of the piano-accordion: This master of the Piano Accordion was born in Salto Canavese near Turin in Piedmont, Italy, and started to play the accordion when nine years old, being the first of his family to play this instrument. This was against the wishes of his father who wanted to make a grocer out of the small Guido. But in his own words, "with music singing in my heart there was no inspiration in potatoes and beans," and by the time Guido was 14 he was in Switzerland, playing professionally on the accordion and was already making a name for himself as a virtuoso of this instrument. His work took him to Germany and it was there he first became acquainted with what is now known as the piano accordion and resolved to possess one as soon as possible. Returning to Italy in 1906 to serve in the army, he was assigned to the band of the 29th infantry, playing several wind instruments but featuring the bass. The attractiveness of the new instrument heard in Germany was not forgotten and one was built to order for his use. Additional fame came with the skillful use of this resourceful instrument, and in 1908 the innate ambition and restlessness of the true musician asserted itself and Deiro came to America, landing in Seattle. The success which had attended the use of this new instrument, his own confidence in its musical worth, and the skill which he had acquired in its use led Deiro to put to the test an idea of his own that had long been forming, the idea that this instrument was good enough to hold its own in any company and with any kind of music -- elevating it to a concert instrument of the first rank. Previous to this time it had not had this distinction, being considered an instrument for street playing and similar uses only. In 1910, Deiro was booked on the bill at the American Theatre in San Francisco, as the Premier Piano Accordionist -- a designation that could not be more correct, for up to this time the instrument had not been used on the stage. Deiro, at this time, also furnished the name by which the instrument is since known, -- translating its Italian name of "Armonica Sistema Piano" to "Piano Accordion." As the crucial moment approached when his confidence was to be put to the test, we can well imagine the anxiety of this Italian musician. Would he be a flop, and the new Piano Accordion prove unable to hold its own? Financially and artistically, it was a critical time for Deiro. In his own words, as he told it to us: "I stepped into the spot-light, I and my piano accordion, right into the glare of it. There was the time and the place to show what could be done with this instrument. It's now or never, I told myself, and began to play. I forgot about my fingers and the keys of wood and celluloid. I only remembered that my heart was full of melody and I wanted to show the people in the theatre how beautiful that melody was." Guido's younger brother, Pietro (1888-1954), first made his living as a miner before he pursued a career as a professional musician. First Pietro worked in the iron mines near Metz, Germany, while Guido performed at a local Metz tavern. In 1907 Pietro immigrated to the United States to live with his uncle and work in the coal mines near Cle Elem, Washington. After some time, he decided to follow in his older brotherÆs footsteps, perhaps inspired by Guido's success. Pietro explained, "When we were children together I was always inspired by his playing before I began to play the accordion. The thought uppermost in my mind in those days was if I could only become as good a player as Guido." (Typewritten undated article by Pietro Deiro found in the Deiro Archive, Center for the Study of Free-Reed Instruments, Graduate Center, City University of New York) During the summer of 1908, Pietro got a job at the Idaho Saloon in Seattle. He played a three-row sixty-bass diatonic button accordion with a pianist, and made $18 per week. Apparently Pietro did not know how to play the left hand bass and chord buttons, and therefore he was dependent on the pianist to provide accompaniment. Two months later during the autumn of 1908, Guido arrived in Seattle and got a job playing his piano-accordion as a soloist at another Seattle tavern, the Jackson Saloon, also for $18 per week. Pietro recognized the advantages of his brotherÆs piano-accordion (audiences were fascinated by its novel appearance and sound, and after he learned how to play the left hand, he could make twice as much money as he wouldnÆt have to share his salary with an accompanist), and asked his brother to teach him how to play the instrument. In 1910, Guido was discovered by a talent scout and began playing professionally on the Orpheum vaudeville circuit as a solo piano-accordionist: "America's Premiere Piano Accordionist." After some time, Pietro also joined the vaudeville circuit and signed with a competing agency. Both brothers began making records, Guido for Edison and Columbia, and Pietro for Victor and Decca. One modern scholar described the importance of the Deiro brothers, "Put simply, they were the pioneers of the piano accordion in America. Having emigrated from their native Italy around 1908, they had, within a few years, successfully established their solo acts as major attractions both in vaudeville and on record; and for nearly two decades thereafter - until roughly the time of the Depression - they were the leading popularizers of the instrument in this country. . . . The records of both brothers were enormously popular in their day, and, along with their vaudeville stardom, helped to propel them to the status of minor celebrities in American pop culture by the late teens." (Peter Muir, "The Deiro Recordings," The Free-Reed Journal, vol. 4 [Center for the Study of Free-Reed Instruments: Fall 2002]) Pietro Deiro (1888-1954) is considered one of the greatest and most influential accordionists of the first half of the twentieth century. Born in Salto, Italy, he immigrated to the United States in 1907, and in 1908 began to play the diatonic button-accordion professionally at a saloon in Seattle, Washington. That same year Pietro's older brother Guido (already an accomplished piano-accordionist in Europe) also immigrated to the United States, and there in Seattle he taught Pietro how to play the piano-accordion. Guido was a sensation and became a vaudeville star in 1910. Pietro, recognizing a good thing, followed in his brother's footsteps, and also became a celebrity on the vaudeville circuit at least by 1912. He earned up to $500 per week: a phenomenal income in those days. One contemporary 1921 newspaper reviewer praised Pietro's musicianship: "What Paderewski is to the piano, Spalding to the violin, and Hans Kronol to the cello, Pietro is to the piano-accordeon. This man takes this instrument, which recently has attained a dignified standing among musicians, and gives it a human voice, a voice that is alive with joy, and dragged down to the depths of sorrow." Pietro recorded 78 RPM records for Victor and Decca: a total of 147 sides during his career, beginning in 1912. Amazingly, Pietro enjoyed a flourishing recording career even during the Great Depressionùa remarkable achievement, considering the doldrums the record industry was in at the time. Pietro dominated the solo accordion category in Victor's 1930 Italian catalog with a full eighteen sides (Pietro Frosini could only muster ten sides). When the vaudeville industry began to decline, Pietroùa successful businessmanùestablished a music studio in 1928 in Greenwich Village, New York, which attracted so many students that he had to hire a staff of professional teachers. Eventually he established a chain of accordion studios on the East coast. Recognizing early on that his students needed sheet music, Pietro established the music publishing firm Accordion Music Publishing Company (AMPCO), later known simply as Pietro Deiro Publications. Pietro composed over 200 original works for the accordion and arranged countless other pieces. Pietro was popular and influential. He appeared as a regular columnist for general music publications such as The Etude and Metronome magazines, and he participated prominently in the main accordion journals of the 1930s and 1940s such as Accordion World and Accordion News. He published his own newsletter called The Pietro Musicordion, he produced his own radio show, and he established a record company devoted to the accordion: AMPCO Records. In 1936 Italian accordion manufacturers presented him with a parchment scroll and gold plaque for his contributions toward the advancement of the instrument. Pietro was one of the founding members of the American Accordionists' Association (created on March 9, 1938), and was elected the association's first president by the board. One modern scholar, Peter Muir, explained: "He [Pietro] effectively became the premiere accordionist in America, a sort of legendary father-figure whose status was embodied by his nickname 'The Daddy of the Accordion,' which he carefully cultivated from early in the decade [beginning in 1930]." More Great Records on sale right now: CLICK ON THIS LINK TO SEE MORE GREAT RECORDS CLICK ON THIS LINK TO SEE ALL ITEMS - VINTAGE BOOKS, VICTROLA and TURNTABLE ITEMS, CDs, Books and DVDs http://shop.ebay.com/carsten_sf/m.html ==== A Quick NOTE ON GRADING AND SHIPPING: As you can see from my feedback, I try hard to earn your POSITIVE FEEDBACK and FIVE STAR RATINGS. If for any reason your transaction was NOT SATISFACTORY, pls contact me and I will work something out with you. YOU WILL NEVER HAVE A REASON TO GIVE ME A NEGATIVE RATING or a LOW STAR RATING. Quick note on grading: The Grade (Excellent to Poor, I don't give Mint) refers to the WEAR of the record. Any other defects are stated separately When I listen to a record, I may also give it an aural grade (again E to P), and make a SUBJECTIVE judgment of the pressing quality for hiss and surface noise."EXCEPTIONALLY QUIET" is close to noiseless, like a vinyl pressing."VERY QUIET" is an above average quiet record for a given pressing."Quiet" is a record that is a great example with some noise. These judgments are SUBJECTIVE and will depend one the styli, phonograph etc. you use on your own equipment. Multiple item shipping: I am happy to combine items for shipment in one parcel. Records will be packed safely between corrugated cardboard in a sturdy box with plenty of padding for safe shipment. Shipment is usually Media Mail, unless you request another service. Shipping is at your risk, I will be happy to insure items at your cost. I charge actual postage plus a small handling fee for packing materials As always, I guarantee your satisfaction. If you don't like the item, just return it, and I will refund the full purchase price. If you are in the San Francisco area, I welcome pick-up in person. I am very happy to ship records worldwide. Please use the EBAY shipping cost as a guideline. As always, I would appreciate any suggestions and corrections from you, pls contact me with any question. Thank you very much, and enjoy these great records!!! Powered by SixBit's eCommerce Solution

Price: 12.99 USD

Location: San Francisco, California

End Time: 2024-11-15T23:38:34.000Z

Shipping Cost: 7.49 USD

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1913 Italian ACCORDION PIETRO DEIRO Alessandro STRADELLA OVERTURE VICTOR 353451913 Italian ACCORDION PIETRO DEIRO Alessandro STRADELLA OVERTURE VICTOR 35345

Item Specifics

Restocking Fee: No

Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer

All returns accepted: Returns Accepted

Item must be returned within: 30 Days

Refund will be given as: Money Back

Artist: CLICK RIGHT ARROW > FOR CONDITION, PIETRO DEIRO

Format: Record

Material: Shellac

Genre: Classical, Opera, World Music

Record Label: RCA Victor

Record Size: 12"

Style: Brass, Canzona, Ceremonial, Chanson, Christian, Comedy/Novelty Music, Europop, Field Recording, Film Score/Soundtrack, Germany & Austria, Gospel, Jazz Instrument, Marching, Music Hall, Musical/Original Cast, Prayers/Sermons, Radio Play/Show, Satire, Schlager, Traditional/Vocal, Vocal, Vocal Jazz, Waltz, Big Band/Swing, Cabaret/Vaudeville, Documentary, Italy, Opera, Political/Conscious, Story

Speed: 78 RPM

Release Title: Calixa Lavalle´e Rosa de boda/ Flotow Alessandro Stradella. Ouver

Language: Italian

Catalog Number: 35345

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