# Concertina - Part 1 My wife and I have decided to learn a new instrument together. I play a number of instruments already (piano, guitar, bass, trumpet a bit, drum kit, percussion, melodica, voice, etc.) and my wife has a choir/singing background. She tried out ukelele, but it didnt stick and she had some trouble learning it. In the end I think she learned one song originally by Radiohead and called it a day. So, what have we decided to learn? The concertina. ## Concertinas The information below may be inacurate and is based on my attempt at wading through the differnt options as someone with next to no prior knowledge of the instrument(s). So while I think it is mostly accurate, don't quote me on it. We both somehow came to the concertina as an instrument we were interested while talking about music the other day. I then did a bunch of research. It turns out that there are quite a a number of different types of concertinas (each with variations within the type as well): * Anglo * English * German We both felt like we didn't want to do the German one's... based mostly on their look and the fact that they weren't really what we thought of when we thought of a concertina. That left the english and anglo varieties. The anglo is a keyed instrument that features, commonly, 20 or ~30 buttons. Usually a 20 button concertina will be able to play in two keys. Most commonly in my research C/G. The 30 button type adds an extra row of keys on each side that is full of extra notes that allow a much more chromatic range of play. All anglos are bisonic. That is, if you hold down a key and push in the bellows it will play one note and if you hold the same key and pull the bellows it will play a different note. The english generally has more keys and they are laid out differently. There are a few layoute, but in general the notes that would be on the lines of a musical staff are on the right hand side and the notes that would be on the spaces of a musical staff are on the left. All english concertinas are unisonic. That is, they play the same note on either a push or a pull. There is a subcategory of english called the duet. Where rather than have the notes split by side, the split the lower notes onto one hand and the higher notes onto the other. ## What type we decided to get I had initially thought we should get an english concertina. The fact that it was unisonic felt right to my guitar/piano based mental model of how music should be played (one finger placement per one note). So then it was between a standard and a duet. The duet made it feel in my head like a piano. That felt nice. But then we, my wife and I, talked about it and I felt like I was trying to make the concertina into an isntrument that felt familiar rather than embrace a fully new instrument. We kept jumping back and forth about what sounded best. We read articles on the merits of each. It seems that if you are playing irish folk music you go anglo. If you want to compose or accompany you go english. At least that is what the advice felt like at first. So that still pointed us at the english. I enjoy irish folk music, but am not trying to play solely that. I then took some time on the, ugh, web watching videos to see what kind of video lesson resources were available. I focused solely on the english at first and none of the lessons were for the duet, just the standard. There were some very comprehensive ones. I started to notice that most of the songs were single note melody lines without much in the way of harmony or chords. I also found I did not like the selection of songs that folks were teaching very much. So, I decided to check out a few anglo videos (keeping my wife updated on my findings and continuted waffling the whole time). Immediately the songs were engaging and fun. So I showed my wife a few examples of each (english and anglo). We both agreed that before researching any of this that the sound we had in our head was that being produced mostly by players of the anglo concertina. Apparently you can play the same styles on both if you really push it, but in practice they tend to have a different feel. So, we decided to go for the anglo. ## Picking a specific concertina We had looked at english models and had found a company selling a "student" style model for ~$440 (US). That was already more than we had really wanted to spend. It seems that that is really the entry point. Everywhere we looked we found concertinas in the $1k - $8k range. I had no idea these instruments were so expensive! I have played music semi-professionaly for much of my life and I have never spent more than around $1200 on a single instrument. So, mid 400s felt fairly pricy for the "cheap" version. Once we decided on the anglo we found a few in the same price range from a few makers. We found videos online of people playing each and they did not sound very good. The tone was not great and the clarity just wasnt there. They sounded cheap. We then found that the next price point up was around $600, followed by around $1k. We listened tot he $600 one and it was a mild improvement, but still not nice. The $1k on the other hand sounded quite lovely. Originally I was going to pay for it and we would both learn on the same instrument. My wife so liked the songs taught in the videos for the anglo and so liked the sound of the $1k one that she decided to split the cost with me. While I learned guitar and piano on very very cheap instruments, I am older and have more distractions in my life and she has never learned an instrument other than voice. We felt we'd treat ourself to starting out on that, while still a novice instrument, was at least something we felt like we would enjoy playing on. This is the concertina we ended up ordering: https://mcneelamusic.com/concertinas/the-new-swan-30-button-anglo-concertina-in-c-g/ It comes with a hard case and some online lessons. ## Next Steps It will probably take a week or two to get to us. So until then there will not be too much happening. But, I plan to phlog about our progress with the instrument. It will be nice to write about something other than tech/code or just general life updates. Stay tuned if you are interested. Also, if anyone in the phlogosphere plays the concertina please reach out and say hi! I'd love to get some tips or just talk about songs or the instrument in general: sloum AT-THE-HOST: rawtext.club