Is anyone keeping a tally of the "classical" compositions played by Django and gypsy-jazzers? There can't be more than a dozen or so. What are they? I can only think of three [sic] at the moment (without coffee, at work, no CD's handy):
Grieg's Danse
Albinoni's Adagio
Mozart's "Alla turca"
Liszt
Kreisler
Tchaikovsky
It's easy to think of more that *could* work:
Bach sonatinas, partitas
Chopin's valses
Brahms' hungarian dances
Debussy's easier preludes (la fille aux cheveux du lin, bruyeres, etc.)
Faure', selected melodies
various arias from famous operas and operettas
Anything from Stravinsky? Milhaud? Rachmaninoff? Django stated in an interview in 1946 that he was most interested in modern classical composers. Any more details about this?
Faure's "Pavane" could work as a csardas, with strong Slavic <i>arco</i> bass viol keeping the pulse.
Comments
Has anyone attempted Saint-Saëns' "Danse Macabre"?
There are passages in Shostakovitch's String Quartet No. 8 that have a very Eastern European feel; perhaps these could be adapted.
On second thought, a swingin' rendition of a piece of music dedicated to the victims of war and facism might be in poor taste.
On third thought, who knows? There's certainly enough room for deep pathos in Django's music. Perhaps it could work.
Improv. on Tchaikowsky's starry night 02-01-49
Improvisation sur le 1er mouvement du concerto en ré mineur de J.S. Bach 11-25-37
(The above are from http://www.djangomontreal.com/doc/SongIndex.htm )
To me, the Csardas out there are in that crossover category; when I played Csardas de Monti for a classically trained friend, it was the one piece on the album she recognized, and she just picked up her violin and started playing along. I'm pretty sure there are some other ones that were played often enough, particulary by the Germans (Friss Csardas, etc.). I could be way off base, though, and if so I'd be glad to be corrected.
Best,
Jack.
Of course, you have to deal with making quality improvisations next to these glorious composed melodies, but eh, what's a little challenge to bring out the best in yeh? If you balk, you can always make-it-new by arranging in artful ways, or inserting cadenzas, making medleys, etc.
There's something very consistent between playing certain strains of gypsy-jazz (such as tsigane music) and playing i.e., fooling around with classical music. The two styles fit very well together, all the way from their choice of instruments to the way their melodies are ornamented.
I'll post some mp3's when I get my recording set-up in better order.
Cheers,
Ando
I like some of the John Kirby sextet arrangements of classical music, which have been criticized by some as facile.
A while back I made a compilation of swing and jazz versions of classical pieces for an opera buff friend. We're currently working on volume two...
There's the Art Tatum and Ike Quebec (Ike's is an especially cool bossa) versions of "Going Home," which takes a theme from Dvorak's New World symphony.
Going a little farther afield, anyone who hasn't heard New Orleans piano prince James Booker's version of the Chopin Minute Waltz should pick up a copy of his albums "Junco Partner" and "The Bayou Marharaja." That guy changed the way I look at the world.
Raymond Scott's "The Quintette Plays Carmen" is a great small-group swing arrangement.
If the thread continues I'll dig out my notes and see what I've overlooked in my own collection.
Cheers
Neil H.
P.S. I need to check on exaxtly which Rach. prelude I'm talking about, in light of the comment below about C-sharp minor being a killer on piano. I might have written in error (egad!)
Carmen... *slapping forehead* of course! The habanera of course, but there's some extraordinary entr'acte music as well. Bizet was utterly reckless and profligate with melody, like emptying bushels of peonies on the sidewalk. Other opera composers are cramped scrooges by comparison.
Cheers,
Ando
Basically there is a long history of this kind of thing...
Cheers
Scot
François RAVEZ
he especially uses a lot of concepts from paganini (double stop arpeggios)
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Speaking of that, Eddie Lang did a beautiful solo version of this piece as the B-side to April Kisses.
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