.... And where the hell can I get one and how much would it cost me ??
I have said in the past that the modern Gypsy Jazz recordings leave me cold a bit due to the high quality crystal clear sound the nice Neumman mics and pro tools gear creates... To my ears, this takes away the haunting quality of the old django recordings.
So I went on youtube to preview the CD I just ordered from Django books by Fapy Lafertin, which I was told he recorded using the old style mic that Django and company used to make their recordings....
AND WOW !! There is was, that old, slightly grainy sound, but with modern controls and recording gear keeping things consistent and such. What an AMAZING sound ! It's like old django but just a slight bit clearer due to, as I said, modern recording techniques. The old meets the new.
I know I've brought it up before, but I would LOVE play alongs recorded with this type of mic. Imagine how cool it would be to have play alongs that sound like the old recordings ? Am I the only one who would be into this kind of thing ??
Well, if I can find out what kind of mic he used, and find a way to make some recordings using it, I would definitely make some vintage sounding play alongs.
Unless someone else beats me too it...
Cheers,
Anthony
Comments
You might PM member dBlackie here - he produced it (and played, I believe, as well).
Agreed, very, very cool couple of CDs!
pas encore, j'erre toujours.
But a lot of this is the mastering - it is very truthful - possibly a little forward in the lower midrange but pleasantly free of sparkle or lift or plate or any other kind of EQ or ambience enhancement. It's a wonderfully unadorned mastering job... and those old large diaphragm dynamic mics started rolling off gently around 7kHz which is part of it. That's "the" sound for that type of recording. He did a hell of a good job of it, whatever he used... very old school.
I was hoping the liner notes would identify the mike but it only mentions "a single, retired pre-war BBC ribbon microphone, with a retired BBC sound engineer to drive it"
I know this is heresy, but I almost prefer Fapy's playing to Django's... He swings just as hard, but without quite so much of that "drama queen" thing happening.
(The flaming will begin in 10... 9... 8... )
I also bought a double CD by Oscar Aleman that is almost as awesome as Fapy.
Oscar swings too, though he usually doesn't hit the heights that Fapy and Django do... Unfortunately many of his recordings feature corny arrangements of multiple violins etc. and these have not aged well... But it is interesting to hear Oscar swing in a way so devoid of the typical manouche-y mannerisms that most of us automatically think of in conjunction with this era of guitar playing.
And Anthony and other non-fans of the Latin GJ style won't believe this, but some of Oscar's Latin style stuff is actually pretty enjoyable listening... maybe because it features an authentic Argentinian rhythm section with drums and all.
Edgar Degas: "Only when he no longer knows what he is doing does the painter do good things.... To draw, you must close your eyes and sing."
Georges Braque: "In art there is only one thing that counts: the bit that can’t be explained."
These friends, who love Tchavolo, both nodded in a knowing way. They both said they followed a similar path - drifted away from Django to listen almost exclusively and intensively to a "second" or later generation player. But then, they came back to Django with a renewed prism to hear him through.
I think I'm going through a similar thing...find myself late at night listening to Django, and I'm admitting it's with a better ear for what it is he did. I'm making NO statement by the way on anyone else's perceptions, yours certainly included....just an interesting thing for me...given my friends said they went through a similar thing, both in "leaving" Django for awhile, and what they heard when "coming back."
Purely anecdotal, I know, but I was piqued by your experience, Will. Thanks for sharing.
pas encore, j'erre toujours.
... prewar BBC Ribbon mic... well that narrows it down quite a bit:
http://www.coutant.org/marconi_b/index.html
http://keepitswinging.blogspot.ca/2012/ ... dings.html
plus maybe I'm wrong, I think in this YouTube video the same mike is visible?
http://m.youtube.com/#/watch?v=mnyWGkO4 ... nyWGkO4L2s
Edgar Degas: "Only when he no longer knows what he is doing does the painter do good things.... To draw, you must close your eyes and sing."
Georges Braque: "In art there is only one thing that counts: the bit that can’t be explained."
The one I see in Fapy's picture is much bigger than a Melodium 75A: it may well be the Marconi or maybe some kind of STC.
Isn't Fapy just the best? I imagine him getting up every morning and setting to his studies of Django, and out of that discipline a beautiful soul emerges. He is one truly great guitarist I hope to meet one day.
Django, I imagine getting up every in the morning, wandering out in his bare feet and standing on the grass ... and later in the day, looking at paintings, the great French painters of the day, Monet, Cezanne ... or maybe Gauguin, and thinking, Alors! Je peux le faire ...