Showing posts with label Eidelweiss Restaurant. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Eidelweiss Restaurant. Show all posts

Saturday, March 13, 2010

Cash for Gaviani Borsini Accordion

Have you seen my Borsini?

It's a black piano accordion, built for the Gaviani studios, in New England. It has a seventeen-inch keyboard and three treble reed sets, low, middle and high.
I haven't seen it since April, 2006.

Since 1978, I've taken lessons with Gordon Kohl, Charles Bertolino, and Donald Balestrieri. That ended during the mid-80s, when I was working three jobs to help send children through college. I studied, briefly, with Louis Fanucchi and Gloria Ensign after I retired from one job, but both periods were short-lived.

When I won the Borsini at auction, on ebay, it was my first accordion in more than a decade. I took it to Eidelweiss Restaurant for repairs, and have never again laid eyes on it.

Since then, I've acquired an older La Sonora that needed more work than I could give it. I found a new home for it and borrowed a Petosa student accordion. I'm practicing, when I can, from Palmer-Hughes books two through four. I have a Charles Magnante arrangement of Malaguena, but it's a hard piece. My youngest, who is studying piano and organ, had a tough time sight-reading it.

I've scrapped my repertoire and I am rebuilding from the bottom up. I've lost a lot of time, because I didn't have an instrument to play.

Borsini USA says that accordions like mine are fairly uncommon in this country, and I believe that someone knows where my Borsini is. 

I have implored the intercession of Saint Anthony of Padua, the patron of lost items. Now, I'm asking for your help. If you have seen my Borsini, I would like to hear from you. I am offering a cash reward for its return. 

I would also like to hear from Borsini players, or from accordionists, past or present, of any persuasion.