词汇 | accordion |
释义 | accordion noun[ C ] uk /əˈkɔː.di.ən/ us /əˈkɔːr.di.ən/ a box-shaped musical instrument consisting of a folded central part with a keyboard, played by pushing the two ends towards each other手风琴 Jonathan Kitchen/DigitalVision/GettyImages Musical instruments acoustically aerophone alphorn alto alto recorder drum machine drumbeat drumhead drumroll drumstick oud over-pedal panpipes paradiddle pedal steel tuned tuning fork tuning peg ukulele unpitched accordion | American Dictionaryaccordion noun[ C/U ] us/əˈkɔr·di·ən/ a musical instrument with a row of keys and a folding central part that is pushed between the hands to force air through and produce notes, or this type of instrument generally Examples of accordionaccordion It consists of jokes, accordion playing, and wordless singing. But with the institutionalisation of vallenato in the music industry and in festivals, the roles of singer and accordion player were divided between two musicians. However, the accordion player was strong and hung on to his instrument, which was nearly rent in two. The scoring of this work is mainly for woodwind and brass, including euphonium plus harp, accordion, piano doubling synthesiser, percussion and electric guitar. Moreover, the accordion becomes the signifying sonority of a sung genre whose lyrical and narrative characteristics come to represent one of its highest aesthetic values. Gramophone now also recorded an increasing number of comic singers and accordion players. Squeezing an accordion or bagpipe bellows is equivalent in this sense to blowing into the instrument. In version 3, the first section is marked piano and features a static dissonant accompaniment for two flutes, accordion and piano. For example, an older child produced ' accordion-with-a-piano ' despite having no communicative need to differentiate this accordion from any other. Polyphonic instruments include pianos, guitars, violins, accordions and xylophones. Like an accordion, the genre can expand from the school to the discipline, and then to the profession. The downcast farmer went home but the accordion had come to stay. Up to the 1970s the singers were usually, although with notable exceptions, the composers of vallenato as well as the accordion players. Although the size of the user group was small (five unpaid subjects), a relatively wide range of musical experience was represented, ranging from an accordion player to a music teacher. The growing importance of social dancing was also evident in the popularity of the accordion, a novel instrument that was well adapted for the playing of dance music. These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors. |
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