Matt Hoyer
Deceased Category - Inducted 1987
One of the best-loved American Slovenian performers on
the button accordion was Matt Arko Hoyer, the "granddaddy" of the button
accordion players and pioneer performer of Slovenian polka and waltz
music. Matt was born in Slovenia in 1891. He came to the U.S. in 1911
and settled in Cleveland.
As
he learned to build, repair and tune accordions while in Slovenia, he
continued this work in America. He formed the Hoyer Trio, which enjoyed
immense popularity in northeast Ohio and western Pennsylvania. They
recorded for Victor Talking Machine Co. in 1919, following to the
Columbia Gramophone Co. and then for Okeh Records. In 1925, Victor
introduced the new electrical process of making records and Columbia
followed. One of the Hoyer Trio's biggest selling discs was "Dunaj
Ostane Dunaj," taken from the German-Austrian march "Vienna
Forever."
Besides playing Slovenian weddings and
dances, the Hoyer Trio played for Bohemian audiences. Matt was a
sensation on the button accordion and the 120-bass chromatic. His
playing style was unique, smooth and even. His music was beautifully
laced with the typical Hoyer staccato that made each tune a musical
rainbow. He added another dimension to his music by opening up his
harmonica and changing the reed blocks, minimizing the monotony of
playing in one or two keys.
In the early years of traveling to the coal
mining towns of western Pennsylvania and other points in Ohio, traveling
was a primitive challenge in Matt’s Model T. Eventually he got a Model
A Ford.
Matt Hoyer continued to play well into the
twilight of his years. In 1959 he became ill and succumbed to cancer on
December 20, 1960. The dean
of American Slovenian radio announcers, Heinie Martin Antoncic, in one
of his radio tributes aptly stated, "Matt Hoyer was the George
Washington among Slovenian polka musicians!"