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FRONT PAGE - Wednesday, January 15, 2003

Time to roll out accordions
 S.L. group makes beautiful music
together
By Alan
Edwards Deseret News staff writer
Accordions are big. Accordions are
loud.
 Husband-and-wife team Gary and Mindy Garff of West Jordan
perform a duet during the inaugural meeting of the Salt Lake
Accordion Club at the South Valley Unitarian Church in
Holladay.
 Jason Olson, Deseret
News | A
"Far Side" cartoon depicts people going to heaven receiving a harp — and
people going to hell receiving an
accordion. "I play it mainly to annoy
people," said Bountiful resident Jim
Jensen. A favorite target for
lampooning, yes. But the accordion is also capable of truly beautiful
music, present in abundance Tuesday night at the inaugural meeting of the
Salt Lake Accordion Club. Who knew there
were so many accordion enthusiasts around? Organizer Jay Todd said he was
expecting 30 and would have been ecstatic with 50. Ninety showed
up. "Isn't this great?" he enthused.
"Ninety people!" Granted, many of the
attendees are closet players, in the sense that their accordions have been
gathering dust in their closets for quite a while. But Todd sent out
letters and plied the local media for publicity, and those who thought to
quietly bury their accordion habit suddenly found themselves in a
community of like-minded musicians. And
oh, what musicians they are. Rick
Morrison played a moving, minor-key piece of his own composition called
"The Ballad of Rockwell." Ralph Hubrich, who used to walk several miles to
his weekly lesson with his accordion strapped to his back, played a
virtuoso version of the delicate, fast-moving "Hungarian Czardas." He also
demonstrated a difficult "bellow shake," wherein a single note is repeated
rapidly by pushing and pulling in quick succession.
 Detail of an accordion on display.
 Jason Olson, Deseret
News |
"What they don't take into account is the huge span of years where not
only did I not practice, I didn't even know where my accordion was,"
Hubrich said. Young and old and
middle-aged, the accordion players came. Some were nattily dressed, some
were shabby. One man wore a bus driver's uniform, others sported earrings
and bleached hair. Some are truly accomplished musicians, others can play
only in the key of C. They came, large
and small. Morrison, a bear of a man, is seemingly twice as tall as Jay
Todd's wife, Janet, who reaches 5 feet on a tall day and 112 pounds on a
heavy one. Yet Todd plays an accordion weighing almost a third of her body
weight (a full-size accordion weighs about 30 pounds) with zest and
abandon. Take the impromptu duet that
Todd and equally diminutive Margie Stubbs, who only met that night, played
after the formal meeting. (There had been nary a "Beer Barrel Polka" or
"Lady of Spain" in evidence until they thoughtfully supplied them.) They
stood, not sat, cradling instruments that on their frames appeared
monstrously large and heavy. Todd even put her feet apart and swung her
accordion vigorously from side to side. They both sported wide
grins. And they received enthusiastic
applause.
E-mail: aedwards@desnews.com
Link to Deseret News Story -
http://deseretnews.com/dn/view/0,1249,450026653,00.html |