So there I was, enjoying my lunch in the Cafeteria at Django in June, chatting with a fellow camper, and the subject of our favorite songs to improvise over came up. I mentioned Django's Tiger, to which my friend replied "DJango's Tiger is great except for that F7 chord". I replied "What's wrong with the F7 chord?". to which he said, "It's not supposed to be there. Django never played an F7. He simply played "out" over the second 2 measures of E7."
In disbelief, I went straight to my dorm room, logged on to youtube with my laptop, in order to confirm his assertion...and much to my surprise, he was correct! There is NO F7 in the original recording of Django's Tiger. Yet, in every fake book and chord book, it is written with an F7.
How exactly did this happen I ask? What F7 loving individual started this sham, and what exactly was their endgame? Were they playing god? Was it simply lazy transcribing ?
Cheers,
Anthony
Comments
By the way, both "Django's tiger" and "Django rag" are based on the changes of... Tiger rag.
There is no F7.
On the other hand, on his "I'll see you in my dreams" solo during F to E7 change he seems to just stay on F.
Yes it's true, but when he seems to follow an F7, he's playing "out".
Anthony
www.denischang.com
www.dc-musicschool.com
I'm not very good at transcribing the bass lines on those old recordings and I have not had any time for music stuff lately. Can anyone take the time to figure out if the bass is going to F7 on the recording?
That said, I'm sure Dennis is correct that it just is a single recorded version of Dj's improv on Tiger rag. Of course, we know that any number of his improvised choruses of many songs stand alone as compositions unto themselves! And conversely, I'm sure he rarely ever made it completely thru the 'head' on any performance playing strictly the written melody.