Hi everyone.
Just a brief introduction ... I'm a guitar player that only plays for leisure. Have been mainly rock n roll and some blues ... but am now bored and have recently discovered Gypsy jazz and Django! I saw a DVD on Schmitt and Rosenberg and just cannot stop thinking about this style of music ... its great!
So what is my best starting point to learn this style, considering that I live in a small Australian city that neither has Gypsy guitar players nor Gypsy style guitars. What is my best starting point to learn and enjoy the guitar again, and the best materials to purchase?
A side question - where can I possibly get myself a decent Macceferri copy?
Some help would be appreciated.
Comments
if you go to the django swingpage site, there are links to many luthiers, as well as the gypsy guitars.com website, and there is always something on ebay. musicians friend and music123 advertise gitanes and that aria thing which has a few good reviews, and lots of bad ones, respectively.
also, the people on this site, m horowitz, teds g and d, and djangology, to name a few, seem quite knowledgable, and are willing to share what they know, the reasons to love this website never end. check out michaels lessons on this site. best wishes
He also posts over at the Hot Club UK site as emackenz: http://www.hotclub.co.uk/forum/index.php
Good luck!
Jack.
For example, scale length and fretboard width.
EC except repaired top seam behind bridge (ugly but solid), acoustic-electric, rounded cutaway, all solid wods, gloss finished spruce top, satin finished rosewood back and sides, 14-fret mahogany neck, white-bound 20-fret black micarta fingerboard, pearl dot inlays, 1-11/16" nut width, 25.4" scale, black micarta bridge, tortoise plastic pickguard, herringbone rosette, white-bound body, chrome tuners
Selmer "New Jazz Model" copy with cutaway & small oval soundhole, 14 fret neck, solid rosewood sides & back, slightly arched solid Engelmann spruce top, no pickguard, 670mm (26.4") scale, 1 13/16" nut width, ebony fretboard, gold tuners, handcrafted in the US by John Kinnard. Big Tone pickup mounted in bridge, 1/4" endpin jack.
To generalize, I'd say you'll usually find a longer scale and wider fretboard. Hope that helps.
Best,
Jack.
I've been searching through instructional materials ... is John Jorgenson's book/cd/dvd pack suitable as a starting point?
http://www.maanoucheswing.com/cours.html (some French helps here)
http://nuagesdeswing.free.fr/jouer/jouer_index.html (great playalongs)
http://www.fleche-dor.com/ (Dennis' site-great videos and transcriptions)
Most of all: have fun.
Best,
Jack.