- or
unisonoric,
producing the same
pitch in both directions.
Piano accordions are
unisonoric.
Chromatic button accordions also tend to be
unisonoric, while...
-
idiosyncratic and
difficult to
learn layout, some
bandoneon variants are
unisonoric or
monosonoric (same note on push and pull).
These include the
Ernst Kusserow...
-
facilitate playing of b**** melodies. The
garmons can be of two
major classes:
unisonoric,
meaning that each
button plays the same note or
chord when the bellows...
-
keyboard layout and
whether individual buttons (keys)
produce the same (
unisonoric) or
different (bisonoric)
notes with
changes in the
direction of air pressure...
-
Khromka (Russian: хро́мка, khromka) is a type of
Russian garmon (
unisonoric diatonic button accordion). It is the most
widespread variant in
Russia and...
-
instrument on
which each key or
button produces a
single note, as does
unisonoric (recently
coined as the
counterpart of bisonoric)[citation needed] reversal:...
-
bisonoric instruments resembling modern diatonic button accordions. The
first unisonoric accordions were
built in
Russia in the
first half of the 1840s, with chromaticism...
- but can have 3, 4, or 5 rows of
buttons on the
right hand side. It is
unisonoric,
meaning the same note is
sounded whether the
bellows are
pushed or pulled...
- Garmon, a kind of
diatonic Russian button accordion,
featuring a
unique unisonoric design Kalyuki (Russian: Калюки), a
hollow pipe with no
additional air...
- in a
rectangular arrangement of four
staggered rows; its
buttons are
unisonoric,
producing the same note on both the push and pull of the bellows. It...