- pla**** by each key, that is to say,
bisonoric.[self-published source]
While the
standard bandoneon is
bisonoric (different note on push and pull), with...
-
sound two
chords with the same key, one for each
bellow direction (a
bisonoric action). At that time in Vienna,
mouth harmonicas with
Kanzellen (chambers)...
-
individual buttons (keys)
produce the same (unisonoric) or
different (
bisonoric)
notes with
changes in the
direction of air pressure.
Because the concertina...
-
chord when the
bellows is
being expanded as it does when compressed; and
bisonoric, in
which the note
depends on the
direction of the bellowswork. Examples...
- an
instrument on
which each key or
button produces two notes, as does
bisonoric (a term
recently coined on the
model of the
French bi-sonore and German...
- on the B system. It is
referred to as dugmetara.
Early accordions were
bisonoric instruments resembling modern diatonic button accordions. The
first unisonoric...
- were
bisonoric (two
notes are
produced on
pressing and
drawing the bellows). From
those types under the
probable influence of two-row
bisonoric German...
- systems, tuning, action, and construction. The
diatonic button accordion is
bisonoric,
meaning when a
button is pressed, the note
sounded changes depending...
- Uhlig's
early 1- and 2-row
square concertinas,
developing a 3-row
chromatic bisonoric instrument,
eventually selling his
business to
instrument maker Ernst...
- (Austrian
German pronunciation: [ˈʃtaɪrɪʃɛ harˈmoːnika]) is a type of
bisonoric diatonic button accordion important to the
alpine folk
music of Croatia...