Hey, I posted this at the bottom of another thread, but thought I'd repost it here.
I don't know about the rest of you lads, but I feel that I'm really learning something when I can play along with Django at 75% speed... there is always something smart there which I can take and incorporate into my own solos.
In the previous thread, I was observing on Django's trick for showing the other musicians that he was going to continue playing another chorus by playing a diminished riff over the tonic chord at bar 31 and/or 32, and as you'll hear, he does that in this version of Rose Room. I made a separate little clip of just that passage, but I think it's played at full speed... but fear not, it's actually quite playable at that tempo.
Django was so good at using these little sweep pick patterns that to me it begs the question--- what precentage of these kind of riffs were improvised on the spot, and what percentage were pre-arranged?
Paul Cezanne: "I could paint for a thousand years without stopping and I would still feel as though I knew nothing."
Edgar Degas: "Only when he no longer knows what he is doing does the painter do good things.... To draw, you must close your eyes and sing."
Georges Braque: "In art there is only one thing that counts: the bit that can’t be explained."
Comments
Have you tried using just two or three fingers, really helps you to learn the fret board and understand were Django is coming from?
Go for it.
An interesting feature in "Rose Room" is Django's use of thirds on the top two strings, for which he uses only the "two frets apart" spacing--- adjusting his fingering only momentarily whenever he passes the tonic F chord at frets 5 and 6.
He does this with such brazen assurance that the listener doesn't really notice whether or not these thirds actually match the chords underneath, which would be the big concern for lesser mortals like me... and come to think of it, if there are some momentary clashes, so what?--- that probably adds some desirable tension, doesn't it?
So I'm going to see if I can use this approach in my playing, too. I like the lusty thick timbre of thirds on a gypsy guitar.
Edgar Degas: "Only when he no longer knows what he is doing does the painter do good things.... To draw, you must close your eyes and sing."
Georges Braque: "In art there is only one thing that counts: the bit that can’t be explained."