Fewer than 50 self-playing Otto Accordions exist, and one is for sale in Minnesota

A custom-built music machine, now sitting in a Twin Cities piano storage warehouse, could be yours.

The Minnesota Star Tribune
February 2, 2025 at 11:00AM
Georgia Klosinski, 4, places a quarter in the “Otto Accordian” in her family’s home in Richfield. There's two of these rare automated mechanical music machines in Minnesota. One of them is for sale. (Aaron Lavinsky/The Minnesota Star Tribune)

Before there were robots, self-driving cars and AI, there were automated mechanical music machines: self-playing pianos, organs, even banjos and violins.

And sitting in a piano storage warehouse in New Brighton looking for a buyer is one of the weirdest examples around: a self-playing accordion.

The so-called Otto Accordian was owned by Larry Reece, a late Twin Cities collector of automated mechanical music machines.

Reece, who worked as an electrician at Minneapolis City Hall, collected vintage musical machines, such as early 20th-century speakeasy player pianos and nickelodeons and a 100-year-old band organ designed to provide music for carousels.

But Reece’s Otto Accordian wasn’t an antique. It was custom built in 2020.

The Otto Accordian is made by a tiny business in Kirksville, Mo., called Miner Co., as a sideline to its main business of making brass whistle calliopes.

The Otto Accordian is actually several instruments: an accordion plus a xylophone, bass drum, snare drum and wood percussion block. It’s a sort of one-man robotic band housed in a 5½-foot-high hardwood cabinet with leaded glass windows.

A pneumatic system blows air through the accordion reeds and operates the accordion and percussion instruments under the direction of a 10-song G-roll.

That’s a type of perforated, multi-song, paper roll used by nickelodeon style coin-operated player pianos to play songs such as the “Oh! Sister, Ain’t That Hot” foxtrot or the “Just a Girl That Men Forget” waltz. That was musical entertainment in saloons before there were jukeboxes.

But these days apparently not many people want a 250-pound music machine that can play a live accordion/xylophone duet of “Jingle Bells” with a drum solo.

Dan Dohman, owner of Miner Co., said his company has sold hundreds of calliopes, but fewer than 50 Otto Accordians have ever been made.

“It’s kind of a rare build,” said Dohman, who will build you a new one for $11,990. “This is a niche project.”

This self-playing Otto Accordian owned by collector Larry Reece is for sale. (Richard Chin)

Reece died in January 2024 at the age of 74. Most of his mechanical music machines were sold to fellow collectors.

Except for the Otto Accordian. It’s been sitting in a piano storage facility in New Brighton for the past year waiting for a new home.

“The collectors want the old stuff,” said Les Hazen, Reece’s brother-in-law, explaining why the Otto Accordian has been the last instrument to be sold.

Hazen is currently seeking buyers on Facebook Marketplace for the self-playing accordion with a custom cherry wood case accented with rose-colored glass. The asking price is $8,000, although Hazen will entertain offers. The instrument includes a box of 15 G-rolls.

Although the Otto Accordian isn’t the sort of vintage machine that collectors prize, it is rare.

If you bought the Reece machine, you’d be the only person on your block with an automated accordion, unless you happened to live next door to Steve Klosinski.

Steve Klosinski in front of one of the first Otto Accordians made. The Richfield man is a collector of automated mechanical music machines. (Aaron Lavinsky/The Minnesota Star Tribune)

Klosinski, a Richfield resident, is the vice president of the Snowbelt chapter of the Musical Box Society International, a group of automated music machine enthusiasts.

Klosinski has player pianos, a band organ, a self-playing banjo and probably the only other Otto Accordian in the state.

Klosinski found his for sale about three years ago. It had been built in the late 1970s and may have been one of the first ever made. It had been on display in a railroad museum, but the accordion bellows had deteriorated. He got it for a good price, about $3,000.

“I didn’t know such a thing existed until I found the one I own,” he said. “It’s a quirky, oddball instrument. You have to be a certain kind of crazy to own it. But I think it’s really cool. You don’t see something like that.”

In an age when you can instantly command any song to play on your phone or Bluetooth speaker, it may be a bit eccentric to want to listen to music performed by a coin-operated mechanical band.

But Klosinski said music played by a robot instrumentalist has a live, acoustic quality that you don’t get with digital recordings.

Steve Klosinski adjusts his vintage Western Electric Model X automated coin-operated piano and xylophone in his basement as his 5-month-old baby Leon plays on the floor and listens. (Aaron Lavinsky/The Minnesota Star Tribune)

“There’s no screen involved,” he said. “There’s a physical action to it. I had a Christmas roll in there and I was playing it all through Christmas.”

Klosinski was a friend of Reece and bought some of his instruments when Reece died. He’s been trying to help Reece’s family find a buyer for his Otto Accordian.

“I don’t have room for dueling accordions,” he said. “I’m trying to convince anyone I know to give it a good home.”

Interested buyers can contact Les Hazen at 1-660-851-1417.

about the writer

about the writer

Richard Chin

Reporter

Richard Chin is a feature reporter with the Minnesota Star Tribune in Minneapolis. He has been a longtime Twin Cities-based journalist who has covered crime, courts, transportation, outdoor recreation and human interest stories.

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