Where were you?-And I bet you can remember the tune...
For me, I had come home from a night out in Belfast and was 'two sheets to the wind' after a few Guinness.My step father was sitting at the table listening to a radio show presented by a great DJ on Radio 2 by the legendary 'whispering' Bob Harris. He played a tune by someone called Angelo Debarre playing his version of Appel Indirect and the rest as they say,is history. I had of course heard of Django Reinhardt but this blew me away. Still does for that matter.On moving to Dublin I was lucky to meet Finton from the Hot club of Dublin and I was suddenly aware that I was not alone in the love of this style-and lets face it, we all, no matter the talent or lack of in my case have all got a great thing in common -swing baby! My Taylor became defunct and a Manouche Moreno followed by my Moustache Hybrid now get an unhealthy amount of attention in the evenings. I would love to hear your stories people. 8)
I got a fever and the only prescription is more cowbell
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http://www.jillmartinisoiree.com
rimm do you know if the hot club of dublin still play the glenview hotel? i saw them there a while back and they were excellent. oleg is a fantastic player too.
At that time a mate of mate started going for guitar lessons from a professional teacher, who lent him a videotape of John McLaughlin, Paco De Lucia, & Al DiMeola doing the whole 'Meeting of the Spirits' concert, which he then lent to me to watch.
Whilst i could appreciate the skill in what they were doing, it didn't really do it for me. Then, sandwiched on the end of this videotape was a half hour performance by this kid wearing shorts, playing this infectious music that just blew me away!
The performance was from 1982, & that kid who was 15 at the time, turned out to be Bireli Lagrene. And this first tune of his set, which i put on YouTube, was my introduction to this music:
I never watched the 'Meeting of the Spirits' thing again. But i must've watched that Bireli performance hundreds of times!
As luck would have it, the 'Django Legacy' documentary was shown in the UK shortly afterwards, & that sealed it for me. I wanted to play this music! I sold my Les Paul, got myself an acoustic, & started going to Samois. And the rest is history, as they say. 8)
I made a concious decision that day to learn to play like Robert Johnson, 'cos i could make some kind of sense of it. Django just seemed like some kind of alien language that i'd never get....
Fast forward 10-15 years, i'd become a slide master, learned a couple of Django tunes along the way (Swing 42, Daphne, Minor Swing), but still not got into the whole "Gypsy Jazz" thing untill 2003, when Dave Alexander put on the first L'Esprit Manouche festival, about a 5 minute walk from my house, so i thought i'd go along & see what a whole festival dedicated to Django could be about.....
Then my eyes opened, epiphanies happened, i played Archtop Eddy's Shelly Park & decided to take it a bit more seriously.... Just watching Fappy then Angelo then Tchavolo, and Gary Potter, Jonny Hepbir, Paul Vernon Chester, Mandino & David........ All in the space of 2 days..
I can remember thinking i'm now gonna pick my jaw off the floor & walk home with my tail between my legs, knowing there's a hell of a lot of practice to come....
And it hasn't stopped since.... But on the plus side, Django's playing no longer seems like an alien language to me, it all makes sense, i just can't do it.......... yet
Ewan
This was taped that night-the new cd is great , loads of their own tunes too
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B27RdKa7 ... re=related 8)