The keys on every piano Accordion are on the right-hand side while the Stradella bass mechanism is on the left.
Usually, you can find the name of the company that made the accordion just above the registers on the right hand side of it. So between the keys and the bellows. There usually won't be a logo, but rather, just the company name.
The number of keys on an accordion is highly variable. A typical accordion like the stradella has 120 keys in 3 rows. The smallest accordion ever made had 31 keys and the largest had 405 keys.
do organs have 104 keys
They use two accordions one is in the key of FA, which is usually the black accordion, and one in the key of MI which usually is the white accordion. In Fa they play in five different keys being DO, FA, SI Bemol or flat, MI bemol, and LA bemol. In MI the Keys are SI mayor, Mi Mayor, La Mayor, Re Mayor, and Sol Mayor. With these two accordions they have all ten keys of the accordion.
An accordion has keys like a piano as well as some buttons that you press while squeezing.
banana juice
reeds, bellows, and keys
Registers are the switches that can be found next to the keys on the right hand side of the accordion. There are usually anywhere from 3 to 11 registers on an accordion. By switching registers, it changes the reeds that are used and thus changes the sound. For example, one register might sound like a clarinet and another might sound like a bassoon. Or you can have registers that are combinations of different registers. All of these produce different sounds and add more variety to the accordion.
An accordion is a musical instrument that has three main parts to it. On the right hand side are the treble keys, which play the melody, on the left hand side are the bass keys that play chords and connecting the two are the bellows. Here's a good picture of what it looks like: http://www.iicbelgrado.esteri.it/IIC_Vancouver/webform/..%5C..%5CIICManager%5CUpload%5CIMG%5C%5CVancouver%5Caccordion.jpg
The right side of a piano accordion, where you play the melody, is similar to a piano, except there are fewer keys and thus a shorter range. On the left side, where you play the bass and chords (accompaniment, the notes are arranged in fifths, and the system is very different from the piano keyboard. On a button accordion the right (melody) side is not similar to a piano keyboard. A piano player will quite easily be able to play the right (melody) side of a piano accordion, but the left side will require additional practice. A button accordion is a completely different system, and the piano player will have no advantage with regards to technique.
A piano accordion has as mall piano keybored on the side of it whereas an normal accordion does not. I hope this helped!
A GCF accordion is a type of button accordion. What GCF means is that on the right hand side of the accordion (where you play the melody line) there should be three rows of buttons. One row plays notes in the key of G, one in the key of C, and one in the key of F. This means that you can play songs that are in those three keys. To understand what I mean by "keys," you need to know a little bit about music theory. Think about it as if you were playing three different guitar chords, G, C, and F. Well, for the GCF accordion it is the same except with buttons to press instead of strings.