Yes, well in sound anyway. Both concertinas and accordions are members of the 'free-reed' family of instruments and as such have vaguely similar sounds. Most concertinas only use one reed per note, whereas most accordions use two or more and therefore come out with a different sound.
Both use bellows for expression, but with the concertina being so much smaller than an average Accordion, it might be argued that the dynamics on a concertina are a little easier to control.
There are several types of concertina and many types of accordion - hence the frequent use of the word 'most' above.
Well the genre is Dance and they can add the accordion of they want to.
The accordion is an instrument in the free reed family. This includes instruments such as the harmonica, the organ, and the concertina.
The accordion is part of the free reed instrument family. This means that it has reeds mounted in it that sound when air blows over them. The first instrument in the family was the Chinese Sheng. Other instruments that are related to the accordion include the harmonica, the concertina, the melodeon, and the bandoneon.
Similar musical instruments to the accordion include both the harmonica and concertina as these are wind instruments. The concertina itself was invented by Charles Wheatstone in 1829. This concertina was a small hexagonal instrument, with two twelve button keyboards and was fully chromatic, the same note played on push/pull of the bellows. Today, this kind of concertina is known as an Anglo concertina. Concertinas in countries such as Ireland are diatonic, different notes produced on pull/push of the bellows. The concertina is very similar to the accordion as you have both chromatic and diatonic accordions. The make up of this instrument is also very similar to the accordion with keyboards on either side connected together by a bellows.
The Deinition From A Dictionary Is Below -noun 1. a musical instrument resembling an accordion but having buttonlike keys, hexagonal bellows and ends, and a more limited range. 2. concertina wire.-verb (used without object) 3. to fold, crush together, or collapse in the manner of a concertina: The car concertinaed when it hit the truck.-verb (used with object) 4. to cause to fold or collapse in the manner of a concertina.-adjective 5. of, pertaining to, or resembling a concertina: concertina pleats.---- Origin:appar. coined by the original instrument's inventor, English instrument-maker Charles Wheatstone (1802-75), who patented it in 1829; cf. concertino, seraphina a similar instrument
Concertina and melodeon accordion
Accordion and concertina
concertina and melodeon Accordion
concertina and melodeon Accordion
accordion and cncertinaMultiple-choice questions only work when given the list of choices.concertina and melodeon accordion
It is a type of accordion.
No. A concertina is a type of accordion. Even the smallest pipe organs are larger than a concertina.
The correct spelling is concertina (a type of accordion, or type of guard wire).
melodeon, squeezebox, windbox, groanbox, concertina
Well the genre is Dance and they can add the accordion of they want to.
Concertina and melodeon Accordion
The accordion is an instrument in the free reed family. This includes instruments such as the harmonica, the organ, and the concertina.