This may be a strange question, but how come everyone keeps referring to rhythm guitar as La Pompe? I'd never heard this phrase before until i found this board.
Obviously it's French for 'pump', but i've never heard it used it in the context of gypsy rhythm guitar before. Just wondering how & when this term came to be used?
Comments
No-one has a clue, or No-one gives a shit.
Maybe it's an American thing? I've never heard anyone call it that over here.
Well i didn't mean that it originated in America, as it's a french word, but it's obviously in common use here on this board, which seems to be mostly Americans, & is where i first heard it.
Anyway, it's nothing of great importance. I have just not come across it before, so i just wondered.
You do not use it in the UK ? That's odd !
I remember vividly a musician friend showing me Sweet Georgia Brown, having me trying to play with him, and then telling me : this rythm is called 'la pompe'.. i didn't blink an eye, the term was appropriate and slightly funny, describes - with a bit of light irony - the mechanical character of the sound and of our movements on the guitar. In french it made sense immediately to me.
Some pump water or oil out of the ground, we're pumping groove out of the guitar... or trying, in my case.
Well maybe some people do, but i'd never heard of it until i found this forum, despite being involved in Gypsy/Jazz for 18yrs.
Perhaps it might be common in London, but i'm from the north. We just call it 'rhythm'.