To me this is just phenomenal. I don't have any problem with people doing Django the way Django did it on the songs Django did it on, but to just keep it there and tell others they have to just keep it there to me violates who Django was musically and makes the style and technique destined for the garbage bin of Jazz Studies programs. Django was boundless, people like Joscho, and Gonzalo, or Robin and many many others just take the style and own it. Django was a giant, and the people who are standing on his shoulders, not riding his pant cuffs are the ones who are attaining the greatest heights. Joscho just continuously blows me away, and I don't even like jazz, but this is phenomenal:
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Hehe, it is an oxymoron a little bit, isn't it?
But I've heard that same statement around the forum before from others so I wasn't surprised.
I'ts nice that he's branching out.
But this is the first time I've heard something done by Joscho that I didn't truly enjoy though.
In the first song, and it's a good tune, I didn't like his tone. Weird to say because it's probably the sound as he had it for a long time now but in this context just didn't sound good to me. I wish he used that archtop sitting next to him.
I should say I'm a fan of Jocho. Big time. I traveled to Chet Atkins Convention in Nashville in 09 just to see him play.
Also I didn't like the smooth jazz influence. Smooth jazz isn't my cup of tea.
Had everything sounded more like the second part of "isn't she lovely"... now that kicked some ass.
I don't know, I did have a headache this morning when I was listening...I should give it another listen before I diss something done by him, I mean the man is my idol.
Tunes like "Isn't She Lovely" and "Sunny" have me clicking to the next song very quickly. There's none of the grit that you get with Tchavolo, the angularity and sudden unexplained turns of some of Django's phrases, the fire of Moreno or Baro, or the wonderful plinky strange articulation of Tchan-Tchou. Early swing had a beautiful, slightly off weirdness to it that's been so ironed out more recently, and especially by the smooth movement. I think beauty is sometimes an overrated concept in music. There are other things...
I did like his build up during the solo on "Isn't She Lovely", but the band didn't go with him at all - just kept plowing through in the background. That could have been a real moment of intensity and interest...
Phenomenal indeed...
Cheers,
Marc
Joscho has great chops, and I am certainly not averse to people pushing the envelope in jazz manouche (my favourite album's Les Doigts dans le Prise and particularly the wackier tunes on there), but this concert is pushing it in a pretty bland direction in my opinion.
For boundary pushing, this from Tcha and Robin Nolan is more to my taste. You could imagine it being played in the 1940s, but the thing that keeps it modern and engaging, and timeless, is the fact that in no sense can it be ignored - it will never be background music. You may not like it, or you may love it, but you will never put it on in the background during a dinner party. It must be listened to. That is what I think modernity and pushing boundaries is, and why for me, most of the new gypsy stuff falls short.