Hello,
I thought I'd introduce myself. I've been playing guitar for 25 years but just got into the GJ style over the past year or so. You might even say that I'm mildly obsessed with it at the moment. Anyway, this website appears to be a great resource and I humbly look forward to learning a great deal here.
I went out and got a Sage Gitane DG-255 and I just started working with Romane's L'Esprit Manouche method book. Any additional advice for this novice on how to embark on the GJ journey would be greatly appreciated.
Kind regards,
ski
Comments
Hope this helps.
-Paul
I have BL's Live at Vienne DVD - it's amazing. That has fueled the obsession considerably.
I'm now in the process of building a GJ CD collection. I have a BL CD, as well as a Tchavolo Schmitt CD and JJ's Franco-American Swing. So far, I'm partial to Tchavolo among those three.
Learning to play good rhythm is the most important thing you can do as a beginner. Nearly everyone vastly underestimates how important and how hard it really is. You should also learn as much repertoire as possible...set a goal of 100 Gypsy jazz standards to start.
For lead playing, the best thing you can do is learn the rest stroke technique...that will help you get the proper tone, volume, and speed for this music.
Good luck!
-Michael
Is there a single book I could get that would contain chord charts for a large number of GJ standards? If not one book, maybe the top two or three?
This is quickly becomeing the Gypsy Jazz bible
Complete Django: The Ultimate Djangos Book" border="0"
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Complete
Django: The Ultimate Djangos Book
Another big fake book:
Gig Book" border="0" width="100">
Robin
Nolan
Gig Book
These play-alongs are good for practicing and learning songs:
Pearl
Django Play-Along Songbook Vol.1
The Gypsy Jazz Chord Book Vol 1"
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Colin
Cosimini
The Gypsy Jazz Chord Book Vol 1
Gypsy Jazz Songbook and Play Along CD Volume 1"
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Robin
Nolan
Gypsy Jazz Songbook and Play Along CD Volume 1
I'm imagining the most productive way would be to always have some small number--maybe 3 to 5--of new songs you're working on. For each of you'd learn the rhythm part and the head, and you'd cycle through this list fairly quickly--maybe a new batch every couple of weeks. Do people have advice/experience with an undertaking like this?
In the past my repertoire building has been haphazard because I have a non-musician life that consumes the bulk of my time, and because I'm not a performer, so there's no pressure to learn lots of songs. I'd like to make the most of the time I do have for playing music, though, and this forum is great for advice about practice regimen, so I'm curious what people have to say.
I have the book "Django Reinhardt - The Definitive Collection". However, it really hasn't resonated with me as being partculary user friendly. I'm interested in getting the chrod charts for rhythm, and this book focuses on laying out the single-note stuff. Do the "Complete Django" or Cosimini's books provide more of what I'm looking for? I realize this is a tough question but perhaps my meaning comes across....
Yes...the books I listed previously all are designed to teach repertoire. So they have the basic melody and chord changes. The Definitive Django book is more of transcription book....
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