Squeezed
out: last accordion maker in France to close shop after 105 years
Maugein
owner blames competition from China and Covid pandemic for firm’s demise, but
former French president says there is hope
Kim Willsher
in Paris
Sat 5 Oct
2024 06.00 CEST
Its
distinctive sound has provided the soundtrack for some of France’s most
recognisable cultural classics, from Parisian dance halls to the film Amélie
and the songs of Édith Piaf. It has even been played by a former president.
But it seems
the traditional French-made accordéon à bretelles (strap accordion) has been
squeezed out of existence after Maugein, the country’s last manufacturer, was
forced into liquidation after 105 years of making the instrument, known as the
“poor person’s piano”.
“We’re
closing,” said Richard Brandao, 57, who took over the struggling company 11
years ago, and who blames competition from China and the disruption of the
Covid pandemic for the firm’s demise.
“Since
Covid, it’s all over. We were going up the slope until 2019, but Covid took us
down,” he added.
Maugein, the
last artisanal French accordion maker in a market dominated by Chinese
manufacturers, still had 10 employees, the oldest of whom started out as an
apprentice 39 years ago.
Founded in
1919 by Jean Maugein, who made the instruments in a former first world war
munitions factory, the company originally employed 290 people in the town of
Tulle in the Corrèze in central France. Business boomed after the second world
war when the arrival in France of jazz and swing boosted sales, but the company
began to decline in the 1970s.
Former
president Valéry Giscard d’Estaing, who died in 2020 and was a keen
accordionist, is credited with using the instrument to revolutionise political
communication.
In 1973,
while minister of finance, he was filmed playing a duet with the French “Queen
of the Accordion” Yvette Horner at the international accordion festival.
“If all
politicians played the accordion we’d get along much better,” he told
reporters.
Since the
1990s, Maugein has been the only accordion maker in France to produce
instruments from scratch and to order, a process that takes 110 hours and up to
6,000 parts, to create 70-80 accordions each month. By 2012, the workforce had
been reduced to 21 people, but output remained at up to 600 instruments a year.
A year
later, faced with dwindling orders caused by competition from Chinese
competitors producing cheaper models, Maugein tried to diversify by producing
harmonicas and electric accordions.
Despite a
surge in sales sparked by the success of an album by the singer and
accordionist Claudio Capéo, the company faced closure a decade ago. It was
saved with an injection of money including €600,000 (£500,000) from the former
Arsenal and French international defender Laurent Koscielny, who was born in
Tulle.
The
announcement last week that the company had been placed into liquidation by the
local financial court came just six months after former president François
Hollande, a resident of Tulle, and culture minister Rachida Dati inaugurated a
€9m Accordion City museum and cultural space in the town.
“Our only
hope was to break into the Chinese market, where growth and interest in
accordions is strongest, but we didn’t succeed,” Brandao told La Montagne
newspaper.
“And this
despite our participation in the China International Musical Instrument Show,
the world’s biggest event in the sector.”
Brandao told
the Guardian: “The company has been placed into liquidation and is therefore
closed. The employees will be made redundant next week.”
He added: “A
takeover project is being considered by 4 employees. It’s still too early to
say, but we should know more within the next month. The other employees are
looking for new jobs. That’s all the news from Maison Maugein.”
Hollande,
now an MP, said liquidation did not mean the end of the company.
“It means
that at some point, the Maugein brand, the Maugein business and the accordion
will be able to continue thanks to new investors. They are bound to narrow down
the manufacturing side but try to broaden distribution,” Hollande told Totem
Radio.
“We will
continue to encourage this takeover so we can have the satisfaction of hearing
the Maugein accordion in many concert halls.”
He added:
“Nothing is lost, everything must be done, because the announcement of
Maugein’s liquidation is not just news that saddens the people of Tulle and the
Corrèze. Accordions are known throughout France.”
The last
Maugein accordion on order will be delivered on Monday.
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