vivdunstan: Photo of my 72 bass accordion (accordion)
Just blogged about this on my academic musings blog. Mainly making a public statement of intent there to encourage me to properly do it!
vivdunstan: Part of own photo taken in local university botanic gardens. Tree trunks rise atmospherically, throwing shadows from the sun on the ground. (Default)
Absolutely brilliant Capercaillie gig tonight in Perth. Huge thanks to all the band, celebrating 40 years together. Karen Matheson’s voice was sublime as always. But I loved how their strength as an instrumental Scottish folk group was also highlighted. Normally accordionist me is glued to Donald Shaw’s virtuoso playing. Thanks muchly from an old timer for playing Calum’s Road! But tonight I was most wowed by Charlie McKerron‘s fiddle playing. I’m a very long lapsed fiddler too, and his playing was epic. Absolutely brilliant treat. All the best for the remaining concerts.

It was a really big step for us to go to this, since the start of Covid, and how much iller I’ve got neurologically in recent years. But it went brilliantly, and we’re so very grateful to have been able to go. Both of us have loved Capercaillie’s music since 1989/90. We last saw them in concert in Edinburgh in 1997 or 1998. Seeing them again was special.

vivdunstan: Photo of my 72 bass accordion (accordion)
Almost done typing 276 newspaper refs to travelling German accordion performer, tuner and repairer in mid&late 19thC Scotland. Just typed reports of performances in Orkney in 1865 including this one in Holm. Analysis and academic journal paper to follow.

Part of a newspaper page. The report text is "HOLM / MUSICAL ENTERTAINMENT - Herr J.G. Yung, the eminent accordionist, gave a concert in the Subscription School, Holm, on the evening of Friday week. The attendance was good, considering the season of the year. Captain E. Scollay and lady, and many other respectable persons belonging to the parish, being present. Herr Yung is a great master of the accordion. He played some beautiful German airs, and some of the choicest pieces of Scotch music, with exquisite taste, and gave great satisfaction to all who were present. As the accordion is much used in Orkney, all who have a taste for that elegant instrument should do themselves the pleasure of hearing Herr Yung, who, as a performer on the accordion, excels all we have ever seen handle the instrument."
vivdunstan: Photo of my 72 bass accordion (accordion)
Delighted to manage some oh too rare accordion practice. Today trying new to me (at least to play) Calum's Road by Donald Shaw of Capercaillie (in linked Bluesky post). As well as practicing Speechless from Aladdin and Thank You For The Music from ABBA.

And here's a snippet of me practicing Thank You For The Music by ABBA on my accordion today. It's a real work out, and by the end of my short practice I was struggling to control my brain, never mind the fingers to play it just now! Thanks neuro illness! But overall happy. It's a lovely arrangement.

- not sure how well those links to the videos on Bluesky will work. But fingers crossed!
vivdunstan: Photo of some of my books (books)
Crikey I so wanted to type 2024 there haha!

I've got off to a flying start this year, partly with 2 books that were hang overs from before, but also a quick read for my book club. But then I also quickly read 3 other books that had been hanging around for too long, and I wanted to pass on to charity shops. I'd previously started reading a couple of them.
  1. An Academy for Liars by Alexis Henderson
  2. Don't Touch My Hair by Emma Dabiri
  3. Days at the Morisaki Bookshop by Satoshi Yagisawa
  4. Egyptian Myths: Meet the Gods, Goddesses, and Pharaohs of Ancient Egypt by Jean Menzies
  5. Tutankhamun: The Treasures of the Tomb by Zahi Hawass
  6. ABBA: The Treasures by Ingmarie Halling and Carl Magnus Palm
An Academy for Liars is a dark academia book, with rather a lot of violence and gore added to the mix. It was ok, but I had to push to keep reading it to the end. 3/5 stars.

Don't Touch My Hair by Emma Dabiri was an incredible insight into the experience and history of black hair. A strong 4/5 stars.

Days at the Morisaki Bookshop was another 3/5 star read for me. Ok, mostly, but a rather odd writing style, and an unexpected and lengthy shift away from the cosy bookshop setting mid way through. 3/5 stars.

Egyptian Myths by classical historian and YouTuber Jean Menzies was an entertaining and informative text, full of striking large format illustrations from Katie Ponder. I did find the order and structure a little confusing in places, but I learned a lot. 4/5 stars.

Tutankhamun: The Treasures of the Tomb is a large format coffee table book, filled with huge photographs and details of many hundreds of items from Tutankhamun's tomb. The items chosen are a selection carefully curated by Zahi Hawass, and it's not exhaustive. But for what you did get it was jaw dropping, including multi-page folding out large photographs. Both Martin and I were stunned by parts. 5/5 stars.

ABBA: The Treasures is a large format squidgy book telling much of the story of ABBA in photographs, reminiscences, and reproductions of paper ephemera connected with them, tucked into folders inside that you open up and work through the contents of. It's a nice book, but a rather narrow perspective on their life, focusing mainly on some of their 1970s international tours, which one of the authors accompanied them on. I did feel that I was missing out on the wider story. But the folders of paper ephemera were a delight. I was particularly amused by the customs list, for the Australian tour I think, including a "piano accordion". 4/5 stars.
vivdunstan: Photo of my 72 bass accordion (accordion)
Very difficult week with my progressive neurological illness, but delighted to end with some accordion practice. Mainly playing my own arrangements, including here Despacito, and also Speechless from Aladdin, and Don't Shut Me Down from ABBA. Extremely light headed, and there were fluffs, but happy.
vivdunstan: Photo of my 72 bass accordion (accordion)
Delighted to manage an hour's play on my piano accordion. Very light headed neurologically, and challenged by bellows control! But delighted got a play. Mainly my own arrangements e.g. Despacito, Aladdin's Speechless, and Bergerac theme. And here, Bateau Mouche by Henry Mancini, from movie Charade.

There's always a limit to how long I can play for. I end up getting too light headed, and brain fogged very quickly, and can no longer control my fingers or arms, or read the music properly. But very happy with today's hour's play! Took me a while to "wake up" enough to not totally stuff it up. But had lots of fun.
vivdunstan: Photo of my 72 bass accordion (accordion)
I've never seen Wicked, on stage or in the cinema. Will watch it from home (well part 1 of the 2-part film version) when it goes to streaming. But I *adore* this song from the musical, especially the version sung by movie Elphaba Cynthia Erivo. Have bought some digital piano music for it, and am going to do an accordion arrangement. Just gorgeous.

vivdunstan: A red chromatic button accordion (CBA)
Overjoyed to get my wee Maugein chromatic button accordion out for the first time in well over 6 months. I'm still learning this new to me type of accordion (I'm a very long-term piano accordion player) including even where the right hand notes are! Delighted with how much had stuck and making plans for progress. Had fun working through some tuition books, as well as Sous Le Ciel de Paris and even the Pirates of the Caribbean film's main tune.
vivdunstan: Photo of my 72 bass accordion (accordion)
Ancestry's DNA estimated "traits" are hit and miss at best. But oh this one's miles off for me! Who's supposedly "least likely" to play an instrument. Ticks off on fingers piano accordion, recorder, violin, piano, classical guitar, anglo concertina and chromatic button accordion. I may well have forgotten some ...

vivdunstan: A red chromatic button accordion (CBA)
Sad news from France, with the closure of accordion makers Maugein. I was delighted with the compact chromatic button accordion they built new for me last year. Built to a high standard, and the company staff were so helpful to deal with throughout the process, coping with my schoolgirl French!

Here is my adored French box, photographed on the day it arrived in June 2023.

vivdunstan: A red chromatic button accordion (chromatic button accordion)
Spotted this, while checking on the same page another advert from the travelling German accordion player/tuner/repairer I'm researching. Forres, Elgin and Nairn Gazette of 6 May 1903.

Advert from Campbell's Musical Instrument Makers of Glasgow for "MUSIC IN THE HOUSE, MAKES CHEERFUL HAPPY HOMES". Buy their Gold Medal Melodeons "NO HOME SHOULD BE WITHOUT ONE". "No knowledge of Music required by the player". Prices ranging from 6/9 to 16/6. Praised by "PROFESSOR BROWN, the Champion Melodeon player of Great Britain, Ireland and Wales".
vivdunstan: Photo of my 72 bass accordion (accordion)
Fandoms colliding for me here. An IF Comp winning interactive fiction author playing an accordion built from a Commodore 64. He’s Swedish, playing a traditional Swedish tune. Though lacks a bass side and notes. More like someone playing classical music on accordion.
vivdunstan: Some of my Doctor Who etc books (drwho)
Jotting down quick thoughts in the middle of the night about the latest episode. Which I greatly enjoyed, as did Martin. He has had very mixed views for a lot of the episodes up till now, including 73 Yards which was my favourite. So often he's felt disappointed by the endings, but thought this one "stuck the landing". spoilers )
vivdunstan: A red chromatic button accordion (CBA)
Just recorded a version to share of the tune I played for my Mum this afternoon on the chromatic button accordion - no piano keyboard - that I am still figuring out where all the notes are 😜 This tune is Sous Le Ciel De Paris.

Given I was feeling really light headed today, and was struggling to read the sheet music by the time I recorded this version after we got home I am very happy with that!

This tune really stretched me in my CBA learning, and was one I dearly wanted to learn. It was the very first thing I played on unpacking the French squeezebox last year, playing some bars by ear, goodness only knows in what key! And it's also one of Mum's all time favourite tunes. I am going to continue challenging myself with tricky tunes, alongside working on more fundamental repeated exercises.
vivdunstan: Photo of my 72 bass accordion (accordion)
Just been chatting in the comments on my accordion tuner's Facebook page with someone who may have sold us one or more accordions at Clinkscales between 1976 and 1981, and also brought down my first accordion teacher from Lanarkshire to work in Melrose. Bill Sharp was my first accordion teacher when I was aged just 4 in 1976. And again later in the late 1980s before uni. Small world!

Mum loves to recall the story of little me in Melrose glued to the accordion shop's windows. And absolutely sure, though aged just 4, that I wanted one. And always going back to look in the window some more.
vivdunstan: Photo of my 72 bass accordion (accordion)
Delighted to be working on some accordion music arranging, for the first time in far, far too long. This time a rarely heard tune from Guys and Dolls - skipped in the movie. Agog at the chord progressions as I figure them out. Never seen anything like them before. Arranging in Notion on my MacBook Pro with a MIDI USB controller keyboard.

Picture of a Mac laptop computer with sheet music editing in progress for "My Time of Day, and I've Never Been In Love Before" from Guys and Dolls. On top of the laptop's keyboard sprawl an open sheet music book for the musical and a very compact USB AKAI black and white keyboard.
vivdunstan: A red chromatic button accordion (CBA)
Here's a tiny portion of the French musette tune I'm learning on my French chromatic button accordion at the moment. A type of accordion I have only been learning to play since June (I've played piano accordion since the mid 1970s). I am going to be playing the full tune for my Mum at her birthday. I will upload a full recording only sometime after I’ve premiered it for Mum.
vivdunstan: Part of own photo taken in local university botanic gardens. Tree trunks rise atmospherically, throwing shadows from the sun on the ground. (Default)
Again making a rare exception of posting one of Martin's pics here. This was taken while he waited outside the accordion tuner's house this morning.

A panorama sweeping across a rural Scottish landscape, with hills at the sides, a dip in the centre, woods at the top left, a house to the right, and blue skies and clouds above.

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vivdunstan: Part of own photo taken in local university botanic gardens. Tree trunks rise atmospherically, throwing shadows from the sun on the ground. (Default)
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