With a delicate
touch, Mario Pedone, 53, seems to caress the accordion as he draws
out harmonic sounds to make beautiful music. He can play just about
anything, from a polka to classical music.
"It's not just
an instrument that you play," Pedone said. "You have to give your
soul. You have to melt with the music, give life to the music. You
need to transmit everything you feel to the minds of the people that
are listening."
In an effort to
share his love of music with others, Pedone has traveled the world
playing the accordion. He also teaches young people the technique
for playing the accordion, and he founded the Fort Bend Accordion
Club in
October 2003 to
promote accordion music to the general public.
The club will
meet from 2-5 p.m. Oct. 9 at The Terrace at First Colony retirement
community, 16900 Lexington Blvd
in Sugar
Land.
"The accordion
is not a very popular instrument," he said. It was popular in the
1950s, but then the keyboard showed up. Now Pedone, who is
originally from Italy but lives in Sugar
Land,
works tirelessly to revive an interest in accordion music.
"Every
instrument is wonderful," Pedone said. "But I want people to know
that the accordion is still alive."
Pedone's love of music began at
an early age, 9, when he first heard his brother play the
instrument.
"When I first saw the accordion,
I thought, `I think I like this instrument,' " recalls Pedone. "I
would watch my brother play, and then when he wasn't using it, I
would hide and play for hours. I would try to play everything that
my brother was playing, so I learned to play by ear."
Pedone
remembers the 26 pound accordion as being so heavy that he had to
pick it up and play it while it was resting on the sofa.
One afternoon,
his father came in and caught him playing the instrument. Pedone
thought he was going to get into trouble, but when his father saw
how good he was, he signed him up for lessons with a professional
teacher.
Pedone spent
his youth taking lessons and practicing. He studied music theory and
composition anything he could and practiced about five hours each
day.
He,
received his music training in
Valencia,
Venezuela, where he grew up. He and his parents had immigrated to
Venezuela
from Italy after World War II when the country was virtually
destroyed and few jobs were available.
In his early 20s, Pedone
graduated as an accordion concert player and teacher, specializing
in high-speed technique.
His
professional life began with a band of six musicians that formed
part of the Agrupacion Orquestal Los Latinos. They played for
important singers that came to Venezuela. Pedone
also founded an accordion school in Valencia, where he taught for 12
years.
In 1981, he came to the Houston
area with his wife Marbella Pedone, now 53. They have four children
and one grandchild.
His
first job in the Houston area was at The Old Heidelberg in the
Fountainview area where he has played off and on
for years. He can be seen in Sugar Land
Thursdays at Vittorio's
Cucina Italiana, 15295
Southwest Freeway, from
6-9 p.m. He also is
a regular concert
performer, and has been all over Europe,
Latin America and the United States.
Those who have
had a chance to play with Pedone describe him as a fabulous
musician. Peter Widmark, 55, from Dover,
N.H., has known Pedone for
nearly 20 years. "I've heard hundreds of accordion players, and he's
certainly up with the best," Widmark said.
Fort
Bend County Sheriff
Milton Wright who also plays
the accordion, said "Without any reservations, (Mario
Pedone is) the best accordion player and musician I've ever been
around. I've never heard anyone with his kind of talent."