Thought I'd introduce myself: I'm a guitarist and dobro/lap steel/pedal steel player whose been recently re-enamered with Django style playing. The recent interest came about after attending the mandolin symposium this summer with my son, and listening to all the great gypsy style playing. Currently, my son and I are working on a set of gypsy jazz tunes for our repertoire and I'm addicted.
I'm currently playing GJ on my tricone. Don't know if anyone else is using a tricone to play but would love to hear about it if so. I'm looking forward to learning a lot and I'm having a great time transcribing GJ solos.
It seems that GJ has the best of all worlds. I like playing fast licks ala Bluegrass, but I've never been a big Bluegrass fan (at Grey Fox recently I spent the whole time jamming and virtually none listening to the bands. )
I also love jazz, but never really considered playing it myself. GJ seems to me a great combination of the two, plus I love listening to it. Plus it works well for guitar and mandolin which works well for my son and myself.
Comments
Check out Oscar Aleman he was an Argentine cat who swung his fanny off
on a Tricone.
Best Tom
My major issue is getting the tricone's action down far enough to make it viable. I'm taking it to Mandolin Brothers this weekend for a set up.
Sounds great- Are you a local? NY (brooklyn) . . . if so . . . . perhaps we ought to play.
Cheers,
Ben
Ps. PM response please.
So I traded it in for a Parker Fly, of all things. Needless to say, I'm not using the Fly to play Django's music.
I agree with you about the kind of chops it takes to play this music right. I come from a telecaster pickin/western swing style background, but my chicken pickin technique hasn't helped much with this style at all. In fact, I'm having a heck of a time "un-learning" my old tricks and have been working with Michael's Gypsy Picking book & CD, trying to get the rest stroke down and familiarizing myself with new arpeggios, scales, etc..
Are you using regular phosphor bronze strings, or the silver coated strings that most of us use for this style?
Michael Dunn, a west coast builder of selmac guitars, also plays GJ style on a tricone with his Vancouver based band- The Hot Club of Mars.
I went up to Mandolin Brothers with the idea of having them work on it to get it into suitable shape and of course I started playing all the guitars including a Dunn and a number of other jazz guitars and archtops. I ended up trading the tricone for an Eastman Uptown Archtop. Man, it is fantastic. I don't know what I've been missing not playing an archtop all these years. This guitar sounds fantastic, looks fantastic and plays fantastic.