i was reading a wikipedia entry on Maury Deutsch who worked with Charlie Parker, among others; and it says this:
"In addition to his work there, he also taught many notable musicians such as Charlie Parker, James P. Johnson, Django Reinhardt and:"
i assume this is wrong, but does anyone know?
Comments
youtube.com/user/TheTeddyDupont
1) did not read/write music
2) had a very basic english level
3) spent only a limited time in the USA it seems and had other centres of interest than scholar training
4) certainly learned a lot more about composition/arrangement by observing Duke Ellington every night than taking a lesson from Maury Deutsch!
it seems completely unlikely
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Maury_Deutsch&diff=prev&oldid=49260737
Many people who knew him well or often played with him have said he would never talk about the technicalities of music or even musical ideas. Eddie Barclay said Django would leave the room if they ever started such discussions.
youtube.com/user/TheTeddyDupont
Thank you for bringing that up.
I have posted elsewhere about how some folks on here get too hung up on the technical details of 'how to play GJ style' and totally miss the point that Django was ignorant of the rules and just winging it from his natural talent.
Then there were many sides to his playing, the early acoustic Quintet, the solo pieces the later electric sound, the be-bop and the Debussy, even accompaniment to singing stars, all of which showed he kept moving and refusing to be tied to one style or one sound.
I am sure he would get a laugh out of reading what some of his imitators are up to today.
(if he were here and had learned to read of course!)
Put a Django solo at 50% speed and transcribe a little bit to hear him methodically applying rules. No doubt "rediscovered" some existing rules, probably even invented some new ones, but to say he was ignorant and winging it on "natural talent"? It's an absurd trope that I'm always amused to hear.
Whether you learned some "rules" by studying in a classroom with such notable musicians and composers as Dr. Maury Deutsch of wikipedia fame i][u]citation needed[/u][/i, or you learned them by noodling at the guitar with sufficient time and passion to get halfway good at it, the end result is the same - they're in your brain somewhere. Django's playing is masterful and nobody ignorant of rules and structure can sound like that (..they usually sound like crap!)
Concerning the anecdote reported by Eddie Barclay, I am wondering if Django was not reluctant to discuss arrangement or orchestration matters with his musicians because he regarded it not only as a waste of time but also as a questioning of his leadership.
Django was sure of what he wanted. Whenever written arrangements were needed he played each instrumental part on his guitar and someone like Gérard Lévêque transcribed it to music sheets, like for Django's lost Symphonic Poem or his Mass.
One thing we can guess from one of the few letters that Django wrote is that he would have loved to be able to write music like Duke Ellington : "Souvent a près le concèr Duke écri la musique dans le petit livig room. Alors sais mèrvèlles sais vraiment formidable Duke vien dés crire grand opéra. Sais fous." (Often after the concert Duke writes down the music in the little living-room. Then it is really a marvel. Duke has just written a great opera. It's crazy).
Well, I was just trying to put down some facts. What was in Django's head was as he said like a tap he opened and the music came flowing.