Check this out dudes:
http://www.robickes.com . This guy has a band called three ring circle who played a pseudo bluegrass thingy, and i was at 1st amused that they were playing 'Made in France' and 'Isnt She Lovely' from the 'Duet' album of Bireli and Sylvain Luc (
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NAQNz92Q ... g%20circle)
It was cool to see them playing it on streaming video, but they have included those 2 songs on their CD (
http://www.threeringcircle.com/index.php?p=Home), which I feel was totally just them playing the same arrangement on different instruments, anyone has got comments about this? Like, did they credit Bireli and Sylvain's wrk for their renditions? And I tried posting msgs on the robickes.com bulletin board but they simply didnt post up my msg at all. Hmm...
Tough time doesn't last, tough man does. Practice!
Comments
His bio mentions he played with Grisman-maybe he turned him onto the Bireli stuff. Unless it was the Oak Ridge Boys.
Best,
Jack.
I don't think anyone here is questioning the fact that they're good musicians, but I'm still curious about what you all think about them appropriating someone else's arrangements (which was in the original post). To a certain extent I imagine we're all guilty of it-Django's Minor Blues or I'll See You in My Dreams intros, for example-but it seems that within the genre these things are at least recognized. Does anyone see it as a problem if more 'popular' groups appropriate entire arrangements from lesser known gypsy jazz bands without attribution, when many of their listeners might not know that it's not an original?
Has anyone actually seen the liner notes to confirm this? Sorry if I seem irritated by all this, but I've gotten so tired of bands that have little to do with the style latching onto Django's name while having no real connection to his music...on the VERY rare night I hear anything Djangoesque on our local jazz station, it's usually Bucky or Russell Malone at best...
Best,
Jack.
that there are reworkings of tunes by Bireli Lagrene.
-Paul
Best,
Jack.
I think I know what you're saying, although I like a lot of Dawg music (and Tony Rice ain't too shabby!). But taken from another perspective, if people are exposed to GJ through Dawg music, say, then that can only be a good thing because it should increase the probability that they'll venture into the actual Gypsy Jazz realm eventually. I think (of course, being wrong is a minor hobby of mine). So when your band plays, even if the audience is expecting something else, if they stick around to listen, they'll learn something, and hopefully enjoy it and be interested enough to pursue it further. I would think that this is the way in which a lot of specialized information gets spread. So keep playing! And maybe paste on a Grisman-style beard if you have to...
-Paul