Jump to content

Lachenal B/F# Anglo


Roy H

Recommended Posts

Hi. I recently decided I wanted to learn to play the anglo concertina so I set about looking for one to buy. I ended up buying a secondhand Stagi. It's great fun and not a bad instrument but I yearned after a vintage instrument, especially one that maybe needs some work so I could fix it up whilst playing the Stagi.

 

So, I took a punt on a 32 button Lachenal anglo that was being sold in a local auction, serial number 57377. It was a gamble as I didn't get a chance to see it before the sale. It has fretted rosewood ends that have some significant cracks and there are a couple of marks that look like a rodent has been gnawing at it. I think the gamble paid off though as it definitely in repairable condition. The bellows look salvageable, the reeds are mostly free from rust, I've already mostly fixed the fretwork. The worst problem being a more-than-slightly warped reed pad from two failed support blocks but this is not beyond saving.

 

However, the most interesting thing about this instrument is the fact that it is in B/F#.  The reed shoes are all stamped with note names consistent with this. The F reeds are even labelled E#.

 

Has anyone else got or seen a Lachenal anglo in B/F#? I've searched through this forum and on Google. There are references to Jeffries and Crabb instruments with this tuning but no mention of any Lachenals.

Lachenal-1.jpg

Edited by Roy H
Misnamed part.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thanks Ken. Yes I saw your survey. Very interesting. I note though that the Lachenal you mention in the B/F# section 'seems to be Bb/F' whereas mine has reed stamps that are consistent with being a true B/F# anglo.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, Ken_Coles said:

A very old survey, by yours truly, from the days of static pages on concertina.net: Known keys survey

Drifting OT slightly, that keys survey has a link to an article on Pitch by Wes Wiilliams (https://www.concertina.net/ww_pitch.html). That link is broken. Any idea where the

pitch article might be lurking?

 

Thank you.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi paaudio. That's interesting - there's at least one other out there then! Thanks for that.

 

I've been busy working on mine. There is still some work to do but it's mostly airtight now and apart from a couple of buzzy and slow starting reeds it seems to be playing well and mostly perfectly in tune (in B/F#). It sounds beautiful.

 

I'll post some pics soon.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Roy, Dave Elliot (miraculously) fettled mine into playable condition.... it was in its original old (Philharmonic?) tuning and he retuned it to A=440, replaced valves, pads, .......•    

"The valves are all but original, replace all
•    The pads are totally unserviceable, replace all
•    The cross bushes are some missing other a bit tatty, change all
•    The long structural screws are wrong, they need possibly drilling out and replacing (one per end)
•    The innards need a good clean
•    The pad board has shrunk and needs packing/ gluing
•    There are a number of missing/ loose reedpan support blocks to replace/ re-fix
•    The reeds have corrosion on the steel tongues which needs removal
•    The reeds need tuning to A=440Hz standard."

some missing fretwork was also rebuilt..... a great job!!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 1 year later...

Whilst not the most common keying, B/F#'s Anglos do pop up from time, they are to be treated like any other concertina in their servicing and refurbishment, once you have worked out the fingering in six sharps. The only down side is their lack of easy fit into common session tunes. The key of F major does have some more regular applications.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 8/3/2022 at 6:58 PM, Richard Mellish said:

I'm all for having concertinas available in alternative pitches, but I am a little dubious how much help it is for a singer to have the accompaniment just one semitone lower.

As a singer myself, I'd say your doubt is justified!

In the context of folk songs and the like, which are the staple diet of the Anglo and the singers that use it, one semitone certainly doesn't make the difference between comfort and discomfort with a particular song and a particular key.

I'm a bass-baritone, and accompany myself on a C/G Anglo. I can sing most folk-songs in C, and those that I can't, I can sing in G. I don't think I've ever had a case in which one key was too high for comfort and the other key too low.

I must admit that I do have a few songs in my repertoire that I can manage best in F (which works well on my other main accompaniment, the 5-string banjo), but if I had to sing them in G, it wouldn't be a show-stopper.

However, that's my take on it. A soprano, for instance, might prefer most songs in G, with D as an alternative. At any rate, any two keys a fifth apart are fine for singing.

Cheers,

John

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 10/26/2020 at 12:17 AM, lachenal74693 said:

Drifting OT slightly, that keys survey has a link to an article on Pitch by Wes Wiilliams (https://www.concertina.net/ww_pitch.html). That link is broken. Any idea where the

pitch article might be lurking?

 

Thank you.

If you haven't already found it on the wayback machine its here:

https://web.archive.org/web/20150303120725/http://www.concertina.net:80/ww_pitch.html

Link to comment
Share on other sites

6 hours ago, wes williams said:

If you haven't already found it on the wayback machine its here:

https://web.archive.org/web/20150303120725/http://www.concertina.net:80/ww_pitch.html

Thank you. As I said at the time (getting on for 2 years ago), I did have a look on WBM - and I

found it! I should have said so at the time - my apologies.

 

I took a copy of both this item and the 'Known keys...' article, so I didn't lose 'em again!

Edited by lachenal74693
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I came across a B/F# jeffries a few years back.   It was in a terrible state apart from the reeds which were clean and bright and apparently untouched since leaving the factory.  I debated with myself whether to tune it up to C/G.  In the end I kept it in original pitch and I found a buyer quite quickly.   There are players who value the more unusual tunings so I would recommend keeping it as B/F#, someone will want to play it!  Perhaps someone who plays with Irish pipes in C#?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...