Catalog of Approximately 200 Compositions by Pietro Deiro in Henry’s Music Library
Pietro Deiro (c. 1915)
Pietro Deiro (1888-1954) is considered one of the greatest and most influential accordionists of the first half of the twentieth century. Born in Salto, Italy, he immigrated to the United States in 1907, and in 1908 began to play the diatonic button-accordion professionally at a saloon in Seattle, Washington.
That same year Pietro’s older brother Guido (already an accomplished piano-accordionist in Europe) also immigrated to the United States, and there in Seattle he taught Pietro how to play the piano-accordion. Guido was a sensation and became a vaudeville star in 1910. Pietro, recognizing a good thing, followed in his brother’s footsteps, and also became a celebrity on the vaudeville circuit at least by 1912. He earned up to $500 per week: a phenomenal income in those days.
One contemporary 1921 newspaper reviewer praised Pietro’s musicianship: “What Paderewski is to the piano, Spalding to the violin, and Hans Kronol to the cello, Pietro is to the piano-accordeon. This man takes this instrument, which recently has attained a dignified standing among musicians, and gives it a human voice, a voice that is alive with joy, and dragged down to the depths of sorrow.”

Pietro Deiro (1920)
Pietro recorded 78 RPM records for Victor and Decca: a total of 147 sides during his career, beginning in 1912. Amazingly, Pietro enjoyed a flourishing recording career even during the Great Depression—a remarkable achievement, considering the doldrums the record industry was in at the time. Pietro dominated the solo accordion category in Victor’s 1930 Italian catalog with a full eighteen sides (Pietro Frosini could only muster ten sides).
When the vaudeville industry began to decline, Pietro—a successful businessman—established a music studio in 1928 in Greenwich Village, New York, which attracted so many students that he had to hire a staff of professional teachers. Eventually he established a chain of accordion studios on the East coast.
Recognizing early on that his students needed sheet music, Pietro established the music publishing firm Accordion Music Publishing Company (AMPCO), later known simply as Pietro Deiro Publications. Pietro composed over 200 original works for the accordion and arranged countless other pieces.
Pietro was popular and influential. He appeared as a regular columnist for general music publications such as The Etude and Metronome magazines, and he participated prominently in the main accordion journals of the 1930s and 1940s such as Accordion World and Accordion News. He published his own newsletter called The Pietro Musicordion, he produced his own radio show, and he established a record company devoted to the accordion: AMPCO Records.
In 1936 Italian accordion manufacturers presented him with a parchment scroll and gold plaque for his contributions toward the advancement of the instrument. Pietro was one of the founding members of the American Accordionists’ Association (created on March 9, 1938), and was elected the association’s first president by the board.
One modern scholar, Peter Muir, explained: “He [Pietro] effectively became the premiere accordionist in America, a sort of legendary father-figure whose status was embodied by his nickname ‘The Daddy of the Accordion,’ which he carefully cultivated from early in the decade [beginning in 1930].”
Pietro Deiro's Music School at Greenwich Village, New York (1938)
Henry explained:
I was born two years after the death of Pietro Deiro. In 1963, at the age of seven, I began studying accordion with professional accordionist Tony Maiorana at Hi-Way Music on Route 18 in East Brunswick, New Jersey. Mr. Mairorana regularly performed as accordion soloist (although I think he mostly played his Cordovox, an electronically-enhanced accordion) at high-end hotel lobbies, restaurants and bars in Central New Jersey. When Mr. Maiorana started his own private studio on Somerset Street in New Brunswick, I continued my studies with him until about 1972, when I began classical piano studies. As I recall, I first began playing the music of Pietro Deiro in the mid- or late-1960s.
While studying accordion with Mr. Mariorano, I learned a good number of original works for accordion composed by Pietro Deiro. Some decades later, I produced a 6-CD compilation of 124 original recordings by Pietro Deiro from his 78 RPM reccords which were initially released between 1914 and 1950. See L’abilità artistica di Pietro Deiro. I authored a hardcover biography of Pietro Deiro and his older brother Guido (with over 100 photos) which you can purchase on Amazon. See The Brothers Deiro and their Accordions.
I played Pietro’s music (and the music of his older brother, Guido) in recital, and recorded one of his virtuosic etudes, Fiume Po. You can listen to it on YouTube. I recorded an entire album of Pietro’s polkas—which can also be heard on YouTube—and produced a printed music book of these polkas. See Celebrated Polkas by Pietro Deiro.
My CD, Celebrated Polkas by Pietro Deiro, was originally intended to be the first volume of a many-volume compact disc anthology of the complete accordion works by Pietro Deiro, some 200 pieces. I had recorded, a few years earlier in 2003, the complete works of Guido Deiro, Vaudeville Accordion Classics, a two-CD anthology released by Bridge Records, which received excellent reviews, including a review in Gramophone magazine.
I thought I could record a CD or two of Pietro's marches, a CD or two of waltzes, other CDs of paso dobles, tangos, mazurkas, a CD of his overtures, preludes, rhapsodies, novelties, fox trots, atonal studies, etc., and a CD of his six Grand Etudes de Concert. And, if funding was obtained for hiring and rehearsing musicians, I might make recordings of Pietro's three concerti for accordion and orchestra. With this ambitious plan in mind, I produced the first album, Celebrated Polkas by Pietro Deiro. The album received excellent reviews from the Journal for the Society of American Music, The Free-Reed Review, the Polish American Journal, and other publications, but I was unable to interest donors to generate funding for the rest of the series. However, during this time, I acquired a fairly extensive library of original works by Pietro Deiro; pieces which are cataloged on this webpage.
For several decades, since my recording of Pietro's polkas was released in 2006, accordionists who were looking for music by Pietro Deiro have contacted me asking for help in finding particular pieces of music. Recently, a researcher at the University of Turin in Italy (Luciano Matteo Quattrocchio) has asked me to share my music, and so I have created this page on my website so anyone can see what I have in my library. Of course, I am very happy to share the music of the man known as “The Daddy of the Accordion” with people around the world, for a reasonable donation, of course! Even libraries have budgets.
Pietro Deiro (1950)
Regarding the catalog which follows: all are photocopies unless marked with an asterisk.
(A) Sheet Music
Fantasies and Rhapsodies
Albania, Fantasy, AMPCO No. 167 (1940), 8 pages *
Fantastic Rhapsody No. 1, AMPCO No. 234 (1942), 12 pages *
Rhapsody in C Major No. 2, Pietro Deiro Publications No. 383 (1951), 16 pages
Marches
Ankara, Turkish March, AMPCO No. 175 (1940), 2 pages
Blanche, O. Pagani No. 7205, (1918), 4 pages
Cana-Vesana, Pietro Deiro Publications, No. 500 (1951), 4 pages
Canada March, AMPCO No. 336 (1948), 6 pages
Excelsior March, AMPCO No. 105 (1936), 3 pages
Liberty March, from Complete Method for the Piano Accordion (1934), 3 pages
March of the A-A-A, AMPCO No. 144 (1938), 2 pages
Oceanica March, AMPCO No. 370, (1949), 4 pages
Parade of the Accordionists, Characteristic March, O. Pagani, No. 7515 (1934), 4 pages
Pietro’s Return (Il Ritorno), March, O. Pagani No. 9615 (1915, 1919), 3 pages
Pietro’s Return March, AMPCO No. 358 (1948), 6 pages (2 copies) *
Pietro’s Return, March, Pietro Deiro Publications No. 358 (1948), 6 pages *
Prior Accordion Club March, O. Pagani No. 9617 (1930), 4 pages *
Raiders March, Pietro Deiro Publications No. 105 (1951), 4 pages *
Remembering You, Pietro Deiro Publications No. 403 (1956), 4 pages (2 copies) *
San Francisco Souvenir March, O. Pagani, No. 7202 (1916), 3 pages
The Accordionist, March, O. Pagani (1926), reprinted by AMPCO (1954), 4 pages
The Gay Hunters (Allegri Cacciatori), March, arr. by Frank Gaviani, O. Pagani No 7981-64, 4 pages.
Mazurkas
Carlotta, AMPCO No. 354 (1948), 2 pages
Dora, O. Pagani No 7383 (1927), 2 pages
Dora, Pietro Deiro Publications, No. 794 (1927, 1954, 1956), 6 pages *
Dora also appears in a duet version. See Accordion Duet Music
Heart’s Echoes, O. Pagani, No. 7204 (1918), 4 pages
Julietta, O. Pagani No. 7395 (1928), 4 pages
Paesana, AMPCO No. 325 (1946), 4 pages
Novelties
Quick Silver, AMPCO No. 127 (1938), 8 pages *
Quick Silver, AMPCO No. 127 (1938), 8 pages, different cover (2 copies) *
Quick Silver, Pietro Deiro Publications No. 127 (1938), 8 pages, different cover *
Romanola, Pietro Deiro Publications No. 177 (1940), 6 pages *
Vulcania, AMPCO No. 141 (1940), 6 pages *
Witch Dance, AMPCO No. 173 (1940), 3 pages
Overtures
Aurelia Overture, AMPCO No. 226 (1941), 10 pages (different cover) *
Aurelia Overture, AMPCO No. 226 (1941), 9 pages (2 copies) *
Eternal Spring, AMPCO No. 366 (1949), 10 pages *
Imperia Overture, AMPCO No. 225 (1941), 12 pages (2 copies) *
Imperia Overture, Pietro Deiro Publications No. D225 (1941), 12 pages (different cover) *
Militaire Overture, Pietro Deiro Publications No. 294 (1945), 12 pages *
Tranquillo Symphonic Overture, AMPCO No. 194 (1934, 1941), 10 pages (2 copies) *
Trieste Overture, O. Pagani No 7201, 1916, 8 pages (different cover) *
Trieste Overture, O. Pagani No. 7201, 1916, 8 pages *
Trieste Overture, AMPCO No 609 2008A, (1952) 12 pages (different cover) *
Trieste Overture, AMPCO No. 2008A, 1952, 12 pages (unabridged) (different cover) *
Paso Dobles
Belvidere, AMPCO No. 298 (1945), 4 pages
Buenos Aires, AMPCO No. 297 (1945), 4 pages
El Cabrito, AMPCO No. 231 (1942), 6 pages *
El Cabrito, Pietro Deiro Publications No. 231 (1942), 6 pages *
El Chico (The Little One), AMPCO No. 288 (1945), 6 pages
El Chico (The Little One), Pietro Deiro Publications No. 288 (1945), 6 pages *
Follero, AMPCO No. 295 (1945), 4 pages
Locana, AMPCO No. 296 (1945), 3 pages
Mancito, AMPCO No. 165 (1940), 4 pages
Pepita, AMPCO No. 174 (1940), 6 pages (different cover) (2 copies) *
Pepita, Pietro Deiro Publications No. 174 (1940), 6 pages *
Rumbero, AMPCO No. 195 (1941), 4 pages
Villa Nova, AMPCO No. 290 (1945), 4 pages
Polkas
Caresse, AMPCO No. 545 (1953), 4 pages *
Pyramid, Pietro Deiro Publications No. 488 (1951), 4 pages (3 copies) *
Rhapsody Polka, AMPCO No. 517 (1951), 6 pages *
Twinkle Toe, AMPCO No. 521 (1952), 4 pages *
Vivacity (Vivacita), arr. by Frank Gaviani, O. Pagani? No. 4101 (undated), 2 pages
Rumbas
Cubanera, AMPCO No. 253 (1944), 6 pages *
Perinola, AMPCO No. 169 (1940), 6 pages *
Tangos
Loreto, AMPCO No. 308 (1945), 2 pages
Maria, AMPCO No. 306 (1945), 2 pages
Rosa Blanca, AMPCO No. 307 (1945), 3 pages
Waltzes
Abundance (no info, except both hands use treble clef)
Allegretto, AMPCO No. 479 (1951), 4 pages *
Allegretto, Pietro Deiro Publications No. 479 (1951), 4 pages *
Beautiful Days, AMPCO No. 357 (1948), 6 pages *
Beautiful Days! (Giorni Belli!), O. Pagani No. 9614 (1916), 4 pages
Beautiful Night, AMPCO No. 250 (1943), 4 pages
Beautiful Venice (Venezia Bella), O. Pagani No. 7206 (1918), 7 pages
Birrichina, AMPCO No. 305 (1945), 4 pages
Dream, Pietro Deiro Publications No. 872 (1957), 4 pages
Elvira, O. Pagani No. 7442 (1930), 7 pages
Inez Waltz, Pietro Deiro Publications No. 158 (1939), 4 pages *
Marusa, AMPCO No. 268 (1944), 4 pages
One Morning, AMPCO No. 266 (1944), 3 pages
Salt and Pepper, AMPCO No. 270 (1944), 5 pages *
Soana, AMPCO No. 269 (1944), 4 pages
Spring Caprice Valse, AMPCO No. 188 (1941), 6 pages (2 copies) *
The Flight of the Angels (Il Volo Degli Angeli), arranged by Pietro Deiro, O. Pagani No. 9436 (1954),
Toccatina, AMPCO No. 644 (1953), 4 pages *
Tropical Sunset, Pietro Deiro Publications No. 5996 (1970), 4 pages *
Tutto Amore, AMPCO No. 267 (1944), 4 pages
Valse Brillante, AMPCO No. 585 (1953), 8 pages (2 copies) *
Verona, O. Pagani No. 7203 (1918), 6 pages *
Verona, O. Pagani? No. 9792 (undated), 4 pages
Wanda, AMPCO No. 265 (1944), 4 pages
You And Me, AMPCO No. 264 (1944), 5 pages
Misc.
Arnilla, Bolero, AMPCO No. 176 (1940), 8 pages *
Ballerina, Scherzo, AMPCO No. 689 (1954), 7 pages *
Castigliana, Spanish Dance, AMPCO No. 377 (1950), 5 pages
Chanticleer, Prelude, Pietro Deiro Publications No. D193 (1934, 1941, 1961), 8 pages
Dancette, Pietro Deiro Publications Nol. 653 (1953), 4 pages *
La Florera, Spanish Quick Step, AMPCO No. 230 (1942), 6 pages
Melodia, Capriccioso, AMPCO No. 400 (1952), 6 pages (2 copies)*
Melody Rag, O. Pagani No. 7208 (1919), 4 pages
Mimicri, Intermezzo, AMPCO No. 664 (1953), 6 pages (2 copies) *
Piccolina, Gavotte, AMPCO No. 196 (1941), 4 pages *
Pinocchio, Characteristic Dance, AMPCO No. 197 (1941), 3 pages
Quick Silver, AMPCO No. 127 (1938), 8 pages *
Serenade, AMPCO? No. 251 (undated), 4 pages
Terpsicordion, Cake-Walk, Pietro Deiro Publications No. 655 (1953), 4 pages *
The Accordionaire, Fox Trot Novelette, No. 111 (undated), 1 page
The Lunatics, Characteristic Dance, AMPCO No. 350 (1947), 4 pages
Accordion Duet Music
Dora Mazurka, arr. by Pietro Diero and Mario Perry, O. Pagani No. 7001 (1929), 6 pages *
Silver Bell, O. Pagani No. 7014 (1928), 6 pages
Trieste Overture, duet for two accordions, accordion 1, AMPCO No 365 (1948)
Trieste Overture, duet for two accordions, accordion 2, O. Pagani No. 7010 (1929) 4 pages *
Music for Accordion Band
Excelsior March (for 4 accordions), AMPCO No. 603 (1936) *
March of the A-A-A (for 4 accordions), AMPCO No. 605 (1939) *
Other pieces of sheet music (not by Pietro Deiro)
Alpine Festival, Characteristic Waltz, by Pietro Frosini, AMPCO No. 310 (1945), 6 pages *
Dizzy Accordion, by Pietro Frosini, Alfred Music (1933), 6 pages *
Espana, by Emil Waldteufel, arr. by Pietro Frosini, Alfred Music (1942), 8 pages *
Lady of Spain, by Tolchard Evans, arr. by Pietro Deiro, Sam Fox Publishing No. 9378, New York (1931, 1952) , 4 pages *
Sounds From the Tropics, Waltzes, by Harry J. Lincoln, Vandersloot Music Publishing, Philadelphia (1915), 4 pages *
Thoughts of Love (Pensieri d’Amore), Concert Waltz, by Pietro Frosini, Alfred Music, New York (1934), 6 pages *
Warbles At Eve, Polka Caprice, by Harry J. Lincoln, Vandersloot Music Publishing, Philadelphia (1913), 4 pages *
(B) Music Books
Accordion Fox Trot Album: 12 Fox Trots with Hot Chorus, by Pietro Deiro and El Vera Collins, O. Pagani No. 7692 (1933), 28 pages (2 copies) *
Maggie
Accordion Fever
Stepping Along
Happy Again
Tell Me Baby
Broadway Lights
Deauville Trot
Do You Ever Think Of Me
Greenwich Village
Push and Pull
Wishing You Were Mine
Good Night
Atonal Studies: Compositions in Atonality and the Modern Idiom, by Pietro Deiro and Alfred d’Augerge, AMPCO No. 826 (1949), 16 pages (2 copies) *
De Professionibus (Study for Left Hand Alone) by Alfred d’Auberge
Grecism (Introduction and Dance from a Greek Drama) by Pietro Deiro
Cavatina (a study in three-part reading) by Alfred d’Auberge
Tone Clusters by Pietro Deiro
Mood Egyptian by Alfred d’Auberge
Celebrated Pietro Overtures, Pietro Deiro Publications No. 830 (1952), 60 pages *
Trieste Overture (Unabridged)
Tranquillo
Imperia
Aurelia
Militaire
Eternal Spring
Celebrated Pietro Preludes, AMPCO No. 832 (1952), 34 pages *
Prelude No. 1
Prelude No. 2
Prelude No. 3, etc. up to
Prelude No. 25
Concerti
Concerto in A, accordion part (3 movements), Pietro Deiro Publications No. 240 (1942), 28 pages *
Concerto in A, piano reduction of the orchestral score, scored by Alberto Rizzi, includes a separate staff for accordion, violin cues (3 movements), Pietro Deiro Publications No. 240B (1943), 20 pages
Concerto in E, accordion part (4 movements), AMPCO No. 301 (1946), accordion part only, 38 pages (2 copies, different covers) *
Concerto in D, accordion part (3 movements), Pietro Deiro Publications No. 382 (1950), accordion part only, 44 pages (2 copies) *
Grand Etudes de Concert, Pietro Deiro Publications No. 714 (1947), 44 pages (2 copies) *
Etude Op. 7, No. 1: Spagnolo
Etude Op. 7, No. 1: Moto Perpetuo
Etude Op. 7, No. 1: Fiume Po
Etude Op. 7, No. 1: Staccato
Etude Op. 7, No. 1: Italiano
Etude Op. 7, No. 1: From Concerto in D
Celebrated Novelettes for Accordion, AMPCO No. 810 (1944), 52 pages *
Quick Silver, by Pietro Deiro
Sweepstakes, by Pietro Frosini
Romanola, by Pietro Deiro
Pietro Goes To Town, by Alfred d’Auberge
Sparkling, by Mindie Cere
Nana’, by Alberto Rizzi, arr. by Pietro Deiro
Sunday Traffic, by Sanford Hertz, assisted by Herman and Irving Hertz
Double Trouble, by Alfred d’Auberge
AMPCO Flash, by Pietro Deiro
Trix, by Alfred Vacca
Ragnette, by Walter J. Bielski
Magic Fingers, by Jacobs C. Neupauer
Sizzling Feet, by Pietro Pastoria
Speed King, by James Bruzzese
Kiddin’ Along, by Charles Daloisio
Dancing Fingers, by John Monte
Music, Novelty Style: The Novelettes of Deiro, Frosini, Cere and other famous accordionists, Pietro Deiro Publications No. 810 (undated, but the pieces—published earlier—have copyright dates from 1936 to 1942), 18 pages *
Quick Silver Hot Novelette, by Pietro Deiro
Sweepstakes Hot Novelty, by Pietro Frosini
Romanola Novelette, by Pietro Deiro
Sparkling (Accordion Novelty), by Mindie Cere
Sunday Traffic, by Sanford Hertz, assisted by Herman and Irving Hertz
Ragnette (Novelty Rag), by Walter J. Bielski
The Little Accordionist: Collection of Easy Compositions for the Piano Accordion, Vol. 3, Twelve Original Dances Composed by Pietro Deiro, O. Pagani No. 7082 (1937), 16 pages *
Sunset Waltz
Pleasant Thoughts Waltz
Teresita Waltz
Under The Silvery Sky Waltz
Aida Polka
Tilba Polka
Singapore Oriental Dance
Emma Mazurka
Clare Mazurka
Live Wire Fox Trot
Broadway Special Fox Trot
Hello New York Fox Trot
The Jazz Accordionist, Teaches the Accordionist to syncopate modern music and play “Hot” and “Blue,” O. Pagani No. 7686 (1931), 82 pages *
Part 1: Modern rhythms
Part 2: Chord Charts, Principle of Harmonizing
Part 3: “Breaking Up” Melody Chord
Playing “Blue”
Bass “Breaks”
“Hot” and “Blue” Playing
Part 4: Orchestra Accordionist
“Hot” and “Blue” “Fillers”
Selections
Modulations
The Pietro Polka Album, Pietro Deiro Publications No. 809 (undated, but the copyrights on the pieces—all published earlier—are 1942 and 1943), 34 pages *
Pasta Fagioli Polka, Pietro Deiro
Clarinet Polka, arr. by Mindie Cere
Prudy Judy Polka, Alfred d’Auberge
Helena Polka, arr. by A. E. Crowe
Snip-Snap Polka, Pietro Deiro, Jr.
Whistling in the Woods Polka, Johnny Giancola
Hop Along Polka, N. F. Hawkings
La Capriccioso Polka, AMPCO arrangement
La Cerilla Polka, Pietro Deiro
Skaggerak Polka, N. F. Hawkins
Cieszmy Sie Polka, arr. A. E. Crowe
Beautiful Brunette Polka, AMPCO arrangement
Olga from the Volga Polka, A. E Crowe
Baruska Polka, AMPCO arrangement
Double Note Polka, Alfred d’Auberge