Since getting seriously into GJ over the last little while, the thing I find most astonishing is the incredible number of people all over the world who are into playing this fabulous music, to say nothing of the number of luthiers and companies who are producing Selmac-style guitars.
Does anyone have insight into just how this all got started? Obviously, the various gypsy communities kept Django's music alive for decades and are the core from which this all sprang. But when did it really start to capture the imagination of the wider audience? When did the first Django festival take place? Who were some of the early non-gypsy bands who took up the style? How did it go from being more or less a style practiced by a particular ethnic group to a worldwide phenomenon? Inquiring minds want to know!
Benny
"It's a great feeling to be dealing with material which is better than yourself, that you know you can never live up to."
-- Orson Welles
Comments
1. Back in the 70's, the group "Waso" was the first, or among the first, bands to show that QHCF music was still do-able and had an audience.
2. Jon Larsen had Hot Club Records going, and Ian Cruickshank wrote a little playing style book that got things going in that area. Robin Nolan really added steam to the "how to" movement.
3. John Jorgenson recorded "After You've Gone," an album of Django-style material on Curb Records here in the US. I think that was a niche record for aficionados here.
3. John Jeremy's film, "Django's Legacy," showed a young Stochelo Rosenberg and many others in a very engaging way.
4. Michael Dregni was keeping enthusiasm and awareness alive in the "vintage guitar" and "guitar player" press. He and other collectors kept old material in circulation.
5. A new generation of luthiers like Maurice Dupont, John Le Voi, Michael Dunn, and JP Favino kept producing extraordinary guitars.
6. Of course, the playing never really stopped in Europe. Players continued to play, stand-up guys like Patrick Saussois founded labels, and recording technology and techniques of distribution got cheaper.
7. The internet helped tremendously to globalize things.
That's what it looked like to me, but I came relatively late. Like all cultural phenomena, this one has lots of causes. I'm sure others will be able to provide correction and detail.
Cheers,
Ando
What ever people say about Cruikshank he was responsible in the early 80's for bringing Fays, Bireli and Boulou to the UK-and his article in Englands "Guitar" mag about Samois in (i think) 1978 really got me interested in the music.
Stu
These are all very broad and general statements, so please feel free to corect or elaborate anyone. As far as the movement here in the US I am not sure how that all started. I know Guys like Tal Farlow were recording tunes like Nuages a while back. So in my oppinion Django really never left the American Jazz guitar conciousness. Maybe he wasn't as latched on to the way guys like Charlie Christian were but I think he was always respected for the most part.
Any thats my two cents feel free to correct away.
I think that this happened when in germany Siegfried Maeker persuaded Schnuckenack Reinhardt to perform this kind of music not only at private gypsy partys and pilgrimages, but also for a wider "gadjo" public. Keep in mind that this was an important aspect of a civil rights movement of the german gypsies at the end of the 1960´s. This is why Schnuckenack and some other band labeled their records "Musik deutscher Zigeuner".
I am sure that it was Schnuckenack who was one of the first who made Gypsy Jazz popular and was very much recognized as a gypsy playing gypsy jazz. In the seventies suddenly almost every german record company tried to feature another german Gypsy Jazz Band like Hot Club da Sinti, Hot Club the Zigan, Mike Reinhardt Quintett, Reinhardt-Delis-Stey-Quintett, La Romanderie and so on.
Best,
Barengero
But what is usually called "gypsy jazz" today - the style of music which is was crafted entirely on the playing of Django, or nowadays, Stochelo etc - is a new variant and dates only from about 1978. It is a stretch to call this music jazz - it is more a type of folklore. This type of music WAS mostly created by gypsies and today they are the best players in this style. But in the years between Django's death and the advent of djangocentric music, there was very little interest in this music by any gypsies anywhere. A lot of people played music that was influenced by Django but through the 50s and 60s you just don't find any music that was an attempt to copy Django's style. Likewise the few gypsies you did find playing jazz music were not copying anyone. Bacsik, for example. Or any of the Ferret clan.
Today there are more and more players in Paris and elsewere playing Django influenced music which is not djangocentric - like Patrick Saussois or Kamlo or certain players in the USA. I think that over the next few years we're going to see a renaissance of the kind of jazz guitar that was popular in Paris in the 50s and 60s...
There is a thread called "Tradition" in the "Gypsy Picking" section and another called "Gypsy Jazz - or Gypsies Playing Jazz?" in the "History" section, where this subject has been discussed at great length. Ben, all the "historians" weighed in on this subject in those old posts and rather than have us say it all again, you really should go there and read the posts. There's good fact and passionate opinion to be found there.
Best
Scot
"It's a great feeling to be dealing with material which is better than yourself, that you know you can never live up to."
-- Orson Welles
Learn how to play Gypsy guitar:
http://alexsimonmusic.com/learn-gypsy-jazz-guitar/
There are lots of reasons why the movement came back but the Internet is the reason why it came back with prominance...
"It's a great feeling to be dealing with material which is better than yourself, that you know you can never live up to."
-- Orson Welles
afterward in Europe, concerning the gypsy people : LES PRINCES,
LATCHO DROM 1993(with Tschavolo and Dorado Schimtt) , GADJO DILO 1998, and SWING 2002 (always with Tschavolo Schmitt).
In their beautifuls soundtracks the jazz manouche has a basic role.
Regards, Pippo