I've been listening to Gypsy Jazz for over a year, mostly the European artists. When I heard a North American band recently (The Djangoners), it seemed that the "pompe" was not as strongly-defined and the bass "walked" a good deal more.
I liked their approach to the standard repertoire, but it got me thinking about whether there is a North American "flavor" of Gypsy Jazz that more experienced forum members can define for me.
Care to comment?
Comments
i wrote an article for this site that briefly talks about this, and there s alo this month s featured article where i talk about it as well...
in america, the style has seen a lot of change over the past 5 years or so, thanks a lot to the wonderful django in june festival and also djnagofest northwest
www.denischang.com
www.dc-musicschool.com
Also in US you might have bands that use some percussion, I haven't seen that in Europe but than internet and YouTube is my only insight. In US there are bands where rhythm guitar has more of western swing influence.
In Europe they smoke way more but when it comes to beer we can probably compete. Top guys over there also seem , however briefly, to have a superstar status. We've seen YouTube videos where top guys have filled concert halls with what looks like over 5000 seats although it was with most of very best on the same stage, like 10 people on stage.
In US you have around 500 musicians, a guess from the other thread, compete for audience of 10.
Even the style between the French and the Dutch is very different, and last Samois when I saw so many Italian players I really thought I could pick out the Italian accent common in their playing too.
Here in the USA, we have all kinds of musicians. On the one hand are the perpetual students who will struggle for years trying to find the "authenticity" that only comes from trying to mimic the "real thing" but can never get there. On the other hand are the many players who just decided to get on with it and play Django-inspired music the way they wanted to without worrying too much about whether they sounded like rhythm players from here or there or if they had the right pick. Dave Biller (a guitarist of truly amazing skill and versatility) is a good example of this; so is Frank Vignola. And we have all sorts of players between these two poles - just like the rest of the world.
American guitarists often played other styles of music before they came to play this music? OK, probably true, but I don't see how that's a bad thing. As I have pointed out in the past (for those people who are not from here and don't really know how things work here), stuff that comes here from other places always get modified to suit our ways. Good examples are the way cricket morphed into baseball, or the way outdoor motocross led to supercross. It did not corrupt cricket or motocross, it just gave us more options for sports to enjoy playing or watching.
We're not Europeans here, and we have our own jazz heritage - jazz is an American style, after all - and our own guitar culture as well. Tony Green, Rick Olivarez, Alfonso Ponticelli, Dave Biller, Paul Mehling, Raul Reynoso, Troy Chapman, Neil Andersson, John Jorgenson, Andy Page, Ivan Pena, Jesse Barksdale, ****, Roberto Rosenman and Chris Bezant, the guys in Ultrafaux who recorded an entire CD of original material(!) - these are just a few of the fine guitar players on this continent who play this kind of music with skill, originality and imagination. Doubtless there are many more I haven't heard of yet. N. Americans can and do have much to offer the world of Django-influenced music. If some people don't like this, that is their loss.