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- Flutina abstract "The flutina is an early precursor to the diatonic button accordion, having one or two rows of treble buttons, which are configured to have the tonic of the scale, on the "draw" of the bellows. There is usually no bass keyboard: the left hand operates an air valve (silent except for the rush of air). A rocker switch, called a "bascule d'harmonie" is in the front of the keyboard. When this switch is thumb activated, it would open up a pallet (a pad that covers a tone hole, at the other end of the key button(s), (see photo) for a simple Tonic/Dominant drone: Tonic on the draw and Dominant on the press, e.g. Tonic notes C/g, and Dominant G/d, without any major or minor thirds.Many of these "Flutina" accordions were imported into the United States and were common photographers' studio props. This imparted a touch of "culture" to the sitter, hence the many tintype, ambrotype, etc. images of men and women, with their hands poised over "Flutinas", which they may (or may not) have actually played. Many of the images date from the 1850s through the American Civil War period (1861–1865).The internal construction of the flutina resembles the English Wheatstone concertina more than the "reed banks" used in regular accordion construction. Thus, it has a concertina-like sound. Underneath the pallet/keyboard face, there is a rectangular, wooden board, reed pan, with reed chambers, made with airtight, leather covered, thin wooden dividers. These dividers are between the reeds, for the diatonic scale notes. The brass reed tongues are mounted on reed shoes, with each tongue nailed on with a single metal pin. These reed shoes (or frames) are inserted into dovetail-shaped slots into the top side of the pan. If the keyboard has two rows of keys, the outside row plays the diatonic scale, while the inside row plays the sharps and flats, and these chromatic reeds face the interior of the bellows, in dovetailed slots on the backside of the pan board, without any dividers. The face of the pallet/keyboard actually slides out to reveal the inset reed pan, reminiscent of the construction of a pencil box, or a Japanese puzzle box. The accordion bellows has a very short "throw" (the maximum extension of the bellows, when drawn out), with most instruments having only four folds. Larger versions had 5 to 7 folds in the bellows. The use of the 4 fold bellows made the duration of the note played very short, and the volume of the note comparatively soft, in contrast to the later "German" style accordions, with their larger, multi-fold bellows.".
- Flutina thumbnail FlutinaCivilWar.jpg?width=300.
- Flutina wikiPageID "2274226".
- Flutina wikiPageLength "8315".
- Flutina wikiPageOutDegree "42".
- Flutina wikiPageRevisionID "653665721".
- Flutina wikiPageWikiLink Adolph_Müller.
- Flutina wikiPageWikiLink Ambrotype.
- Flutina wikiPageWikiLink American_Civil_War.
- Flutina wikiPageWikiLink Bandoneon.
- Flutina wikiPageWikiLink Bass_(music).
- Flutina wikiPageWikiLink Bass_(sound).
- Flutina wikiPageWikiLink Bellows.
- Flutina wikiPageWikiLink Category:Accordion.
- Flutina wikiPageWikiLink Charles_Wheatstone.
- Flutina wikiPageWikiLink Chord_(music).
- Flutina wikiPageWikiLink Chromatic_scale.
- Flutina wikiPageWikiLink Concertina.
- Flutina wikiPageWikiLink Diatonic_button_accordion.
- Flutina wikiPageWikiLink Dominant_(music).
- Flutina wikiPageWikiLink Drone_(music).
- Flutina wikiPageWikiLink England.
- Flutina wikiPageWikiLink Flat_(music).
- Flutina wikiPageWikiLink Flute.
- Flutina wikiPageWikiLink Franco-Prussian_War.
- Flutina wikiPageWikiLink Free_reed_aerophone.
- Flutina wikiPageWikiLink French_people.
- Flutina wikiPageWikiLink Japan.
- Flutina wikiPageWikiLink Key_(music).
- Flutina wikiPageWikiLink Keyboard_instrument.
- Flutina wikiPageWikiLink Major_third.
- Flutina wikiPageWikiLink Melody.
- Flutina wikiPageWikiLink Minor_third.
- Flutina wikiPageWikiLink Musical_note.
- Flutina wikiPageWikiLink Napoleon_Fourneux.
- Flutina wikiPageWikiLink Paris.
- Flutina wikiPageWikiLink Piano_accordion.
- Flutina wikiPageWikiLink Puzzle_box.
- Flutina wikiPageWikiLink Reed_(mouthpiece).
- Flutina wikiPageWikiLink Reed_(music).
- Flutina wikiPageWikiLink Scale_(music).
- Flutina wikiPageWikiLink Sharp_(music).
- Flutina wikiPageWikiLink Tintype.
- Flutina wikiPageWikiLink Tonic_(music).
- Flutina wikiPageWikiLink Treble_(sound).
- Flutina wikiPageWikiLink Triad_(music).
- Flutina wikiPageWikiLink United_States.
- Flutina wikiPageWikiLink File:Flutina-reeds.JPG.
- Flutina wikiPageWikiLink File:Flutina.jpg.
- Flutina wikiPageWikiLinkText "Flutina".
- Flutina wikiPageWikiLinkText "flutina".
- Flutina classification Free_reed_aerophone.
- Flutina hasPhotoCollection Flutina.
- Flutina name "Flutina".
- Flutina wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Cite_book.
- Flutina wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Infobox_Instrument.
- Flutina wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Flutina wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Squeezebox.
- Flutina subject Category:Accordion.
- Flutina hypernym Precursor.
- Flutina type ChemicalCompound.
- Flutina type Instrument.
- Flutina type Instrument.
- Flutina comment "The flutina is an early precursor to the diatonic button accordion, having one or two rows of treble buttons, which are configured to have the tonic of the scale, on the "draw" of the bellows. There is usually no bass keyboard: the left hand operates an air valve (silent except for the rush of air). A rocker switch, called a "bascule d'harmonie" is in the front of the keyboard.".
- Flutina label "Flutina".
- Flutina sameAs Flutina.
- Flutina sameAs Französisches_Akkordeon.
- Flutina sameAs Flutina.
- Flutina sameAs m.070084.
- Flutina sameAs Q143905.
- Flutina sameAs Q143905.
- Flutina wasDerivedFrom Flutina?oldid=653665721.
- Flutina depiction FlutinaCivilWar.jpg.
- Flutina isPrimaryTopicOf Flutina.