All the accordion players are dead or don't play anymore (very old).
The best one was a guy I've told you about - an incredible musician, Bob Westbrook, who made his living booking engagements, playing gigs, and teaching pop vocalists (including teaching both Justin Timberlake and Brittany Spears for several years - even after they "made it").
He was a great reader, but - even more - he had an amazing ear, and could listen to records, grab all the passing chords, and play all the correct bass lines. I learned a ton from him.
Today, we have to either read books... (A retired lead trombone player from the Navy Commodores - who also runs a big band in Memphis - has some books, and five or six jazz musicians are hired to read the books which seem to feature the most important parts.
...or a guy (named Jim Mahannah, who plays most brass and woodwind instruments - as well as keyboard, and used to work with me and Bob Westbrook) gets by with an accordion sound on the keyboard, and hires a jazz guitar player to keep the chords going - when he picks up a horn. Jim's wife (a church organist) plays electric bass (a "uke bass") and Jim's younger brother (primarily a bass player) plays drums...
We get by (sort of) without an accordion. Actually Jim's dad was a "sorta-OK" (and busy) accordionist, but mostly fronted a small jazz/dance band that played on the local riverboat dinner cruises. Jim himself is actually a pretty good accordionist, but (well...) he can't very well hold and accordion and pick up a sax, clarinet, flute, trumpet, or baritone horn while an accordion is strapped on.
Since Jim's wife plays bass, I'm mostly either playing melody or harmony on various 9-foot brass or trumpet, but I always bring a tuba, as it's just best for some things - and he always wants me to play the Clarinet Polka on the tuba (something Bob Westbrook had me to do).
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It (well...sorta...) works, and the people like it.
Back when Bob was alive, (of course) the accordion could do the bass, and we had a drummer (also: now in his upper 80's) who was a really good singer...but not in great health, anymore (so we actually put out a really good product with only four musicians). Jim had a tumor removed from his throat several years ago, and no longer has a good singing voice - so I (sheesh) had to sing anything that needed to be sung. I've NEVER sung ANY of the German stuff before, and (quite a bit of it) I was getting the lyrics on my phone in JUST the nick of time before the second [vocal] chorus would come up in a song. Anyway, we're (no real German band traditions here, and plumb out of accordionists) trying to get by.
Oh yeah...There were only a few pair of fake lederhosen, so I didn't have one.
...the red sweatshirt...(??) I told them I was representing "The Hunt for Red Oktoberfest".
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Jim rewrote a bunch of the polkas/waltzes (that we've played - over the years) in more guitar-friendly keys, and handed me a "book"...thus: the music stand. Schützenliesel was already in E, so...
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