It's a 640 scale transitional petit Selmer. That guitar has enchanted me since I first saw that clip. It was the starting point for Stephane & Roy's guitars.
You get one chance to enjoy this day, but if you're doing it right, that's enough.
Ah-ha Bob -- I should'a known you'd know about the guitar! It not only shows up in the J'Attendrai clip made in 1938 or 39 -- a year before 504 was produced -- but looks like the same guitar in the famous pix of the band wearing their white "ice cream" tuxes -- January 1938. And then it also seems to show up in the picture of Django in 1939 hanging out with Duke Ellington and some other swingin' cats. AE
Nothing against 503, but that transitional petit was a badass machine and I've dumped more than a sane amount of time and effort into understanding it. ;-)
You get one chance to enjoy this day, but if you're doing it right, that's enough.
Thanks bob / eddy ... so it's a short-scale oval hole? How long did he play it for and which chunk of time from integrale, if any, was recorded with it? For some reason I had heard that Django switched immediately from short scale D hole to 503, but I guess this must be a fallacy.
Very interesting indeed! Unfortunately, I don't understand the part about "Stephane & Roy's guitars" above. Who are they? I haven't been on the forum so long.
Ah, bien sûr! And Bob Holo built their guitars, right?
So, a 14 fret, short scale, oval hole Selmer — and Django played it a lot! I had never heard of this before, I'm so surprised. And I have read most books on Django, including the ones in French.
Ah, bien sûr! And Bob Holo built their guitars, right?
So, a 14 fret, short scale, oval hole Selmer — and Django played it a lot! I had never heard of this before, I'm so surprised. And I have read most books on Django, including the ones in French.
In this video - only Stephane's. Roy is playing one of my Busatos.... didn't build that one. I'm old, but not that old... haha... ;-)
At this moment I'm listening to Django play "Sugar" from 1937... It's maybe the tastiest acoustic jazz guitar comping ever recorded. Swing, chord movement, tone, everything. Yeah, the beginning is a little haphazard but he's really having fun on this one just scooting up and down the fretboard playing with the rhythm and tonality and conversing with Stephane. You just know that Django and Stephane were smiling at each other and goading each other. Too bad they lived before smart-phones. I'd love to see a backstage video of Django & Stephane jamming and having fun. Music is a sublime human invention. Is there any other way two people can have an interesting conversation that remains timeless and interesting for the better part of a hundred years and is completely accessible to people regardless of where they were born or which language they speak? Nothing else like music; its poetry in a universal language.
You get one chance to enjoy this day, but if you're doing it right, that's enough.
Is there any other way two people can have an interesting conversation that remains timeless and interesting for the better part of a hundred years and is completely accessible to people regardless of where they were born or which language they speak?
Comments
Sir Yes Sir... that's the one.
Nothing against 503, but that transitional petit was a badass machine and I've dumped more than a sane amount of time and effort into understanding it. ;-)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zTFTBFFxDug
So, a 14 fret, short scale, oval hole Selmer — and Django played it a lot! I had never heard of this before, I'm so surprised. And I have read most books on Django, including the ones in French.
In this video - only Stephane's. Roy is playing one of my Busatos.... didn't build that one. I'm old, but not that old... haha... ;-)
At this moment I'm listening to Django play "Sugar" from 1937... It's maybe the tastiest acoustic jazz guitar comping ever recorded. Swing, chord movement, tone, everything. Yeah, the beginning is a little haphazard but he's really having fun on this one just scooting up and down the fretboard playing with the rhythm and tonality and conversing with Stephane. You just know that Django and Stephane were smiling at each other and goading each other. Too bad they lived before smart-phones. I'd love to see a backstage video of Django & Stephane jamming and having fun. Music is a sublime human invention. Is there any other way two people can have an interesting conversation that remains timeless and interesting for the better part of a hundred years and is completely accessible to people regardless of where they were born or which language they speak? Nothing else like music; its poetry in a universal language.
A good game of chess!
Damn if that isn't true!
Good one.