Hi All
Sorry if this one's been done to death (well, it certainly hasn't recently) but what's your favourite Django solo and why?
Here's mine:
Unusually, it's just guitar and bass, which results in a far better sound quality and warmer tone than most of the Quintette sessions of the period. Also, Django's 'total guitar' approach, which can sometimes be over-busy in a group setting, works perfectly with only a bass counterpoint. Everything's here - chord melody, octaves, attack, sweetness of tone & phrasing.
I'll now disappear underground for a couple of months to try and learn it
but am curious to know yours. Keep those posts rolling in!
A
The war on Am7 and Cmaj7 begins here ...
Comments
my favourite django solos are on honeysuckle rose and vendredi 13
Some solos stick out because they deviate from his usual style completely. One such example is the 1940 "Tiger Rag" With Alix Combelle's orchestra. That is a genius recording by the way. It goes shuffle towards the end and one of the three trumpeters (Aimé Barelli?) quotes "Swanee River". It's intense. I like the solo a lot but it's rather short.
Any of the five Artillerie Lourde recordings have great and interesting solos.
Of course there's the inevitable solos like "Minor Swing" and "Belleville", I also happen to like "Vendredi 13" like wim.
If you really want to hear Django let rip and deviate, listen to the two versions of Tiger Rag with Stéphane in 1947 as well as Crazy Rhythm from the same session. Django quotes "Swanee River" in the "good" version of "Tiger Rag". (the other has a botched ending) Stéphane is really creative too in these three tunes.
Although my absolute favourites are the solos from the first version of "Manoir de mes Rèves" and the 1953 versions of "Night and Day" and "Crazy Rhythm".
Over on the Repertoire section @rimm mentioned the 1942 take of Bouncin' Around. Thanks for the tip, mate, I thought I'd include it here too for similar reasons to my first: the solo, a strangely melancholy thing that belies the song title, really stands out against a single guitar accompaniment.
Some other examples of swinging solos is the second recording of "R-Vingt-Six" (the faster one), the 1947 recording of "Swingtime in Springtime". (again, the faster one) and "What Kind of Friend".
The 1947 "Nuages" on acoustic is great too. The solo is Trill note heaven!
One mustn't forget the sublime 1949 recordings and equally sublime solos on tunes like "I Surrender Dear", "La Mer", "Nature Boy", "Tchaikovsky's 6:th Symphony" (Starry Night), Just a Gigolo, Stormy Weather......
But Vous Qui Passez Sans Me Voir is up there. It's a bit of an unusual choice, I suppose - no lightning riffs and really not as masterful as some others, but that to me is part of its appeal. It seems at once exploratory & introspective. Throughout it he is trying out the new types of "tension" that were starting to enter jazz. Once or twice he seems to have stepped outside his comfort zone or maybe even hit a wrong note, but he works with it and brings it back into the theme and makes it musical. Years later, Mingus would say something like: "It's not the mistakes, it's what you do with them that makes it jazz" Coming just a few years before his passing, it's poignant. I like to think of it as something a person might have heard if they went to see him live at that time... not something "worked out" for the recording studio, but straight out of his mind - you can hear him exploring and learning just as musicians do when they play live.
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