|
Almost 50 years after his death, the
amazing flatpicked acoustic guitar music of Django Reinhardt still
captivates audiences and inspires musicians worldwide. The world's
first true jazz guitar hero, Reinhardt and his cohort, violinist
Stephane Grappelli, created the first jazz music based outside the
African-American musical tradition. The infectious, often-manic swing
music they created in the mid-1930s combined jazz, American pop tunes,
the manouche Gypsy music of Django's boyhood, and more into a style as
distinct and unique as Bill Monroe's distillation of bluegrass music
from his musical mountain roots. Although not what many people would
consider a true flatpicking style guitarist, Django was undoubtedly the
most influential musician ever to play acoustic steel-string guitar
with a flatpick. He influenced jazz guitar enormously and helped pave
the path for giants such as Charlie Christian and Wes Montgomery.
Blues, rock and country guitarists from Chet Atkins to Jimi Hendrix to
Les Paul freely acknowledged their debt to Reinhardt's genius.
|
Among flatpickers, Doc Watson and Clarence White cited Django as a big
influence; indeed, many of Clarence's signature licks derive from
Django's intricate syncopations, arpeggio runs, and frequent use of
open strings to create what we flatpickers now call "floaties." In the
1970s, mandolinist David Grisman, working closely with flatpicking icon
Tony Rice, created his own style of "dawg music" that incorporated much
of Django's swing innovations with bluegrass and other styles. Indeed,
Grisman and Rice even recorded the Reinhardt/Grappelli standard "Minor
Swing" for the DGQ's debut CD, opening an entire new world of
possibilities to flatpicking guitarists eager to move beyond the I-IV-V
progressions commonly found in bluegrass. |
Today, the
gypsy swing sound pioneered by Django Reinhardt, Stephane Grappelli,
and le Quintette du Hot Club de France reverberates around the globe.
Hot Club-style bands perform and record Gypsy jazz throughout North
America, Europe, Scandinavia, Japan, and elsewhere.
Aspiring Gypsy jazz
players now have a wealth of instructional material enlightening them
on the basic concepts and repertoire of the style. Numerous luthiers
today recreate the great Selmer guitars used by Reinhardt and his
cohorts, reproducing their plinky, nasal-toned lead sound and
percussive rhythm guitar honk, just as luthiers lovingly craft faithful
replicas of the great Martin and Gibson flattops of the 1930s and '40s.
At the annual Gypsy jazz music festival in Samois sur Seine, the small
town outside Paris where Reinhardt retired until his untimely death in
1953, Gypsy swing musicians of all stripes convene in a scene that
would be familiar to longtime Winfield denizens as they sit 'round
smoky campfires, pass bottles of cognac and brandy, and play wild Gypsy
melodies at breakfinger tempos till dawn.
All this
from an illiterate man born into a tribe of social and economic
outcasts who had to relearn how to play guitar after a disastrous fire
left him with the full use of only two fingers and the thumb on his
fretting hand. Born in January 1910 in Liverchies Belgium, Jean
Baptiste Reinhardt lived the true Gypsy life, traveling around Europe
by caravan in a rootless existence. Music served as the lifeblood of
his community. Nearly everyone played or sang or danced, and young
Gypsies were surrounded by strong examples of great musicianship.
Django, though, was seen as special right from the start. Taller, more
imposing and intelligent than his peers, he showed astonishing musical
proficiency from a young age. By 12, he was a featured player on
banjo-guitar, backing up the violinists and accordionists of the region
on the popular music of the day, mostly tangos and waltzes. By the time
he was 18, he'd begun recording, starting a career that would include
hundreds of sessions and as many as 1,000 recorded pieces at the time
of his death. His future as a successful commercial musician seemed
assured.
But on the fateful night of November 2,
1928, Django returned home after playing in Paris and entered the
wooden caravan wagon he occupied with his wife, who made artificial
flowers from highly flammable celluloid. During the night, a flame
ignited the combustible materials, engulfing the wagon in flames almost
immediately. Django dragged himself and his wife through the fire to
safety, but suffered extensive burns all over his left hand and other
areas. Taken to a nearby hospital, the doctors told Django his only
choice was amputation, but the strong-willed Gypsy with a deep distrust
of gadjo doctors refused stubbornly.
He fled the hospital and sought
help from a Gypsy healer to mend his burns. Scar tissue forced his
third and fourth fingers into a permanent hook, making them useless
except to finger the upper notes of some chords on the E and B strings.
For a year and a half, he fought every day to stretch burned tissues,
rebuild calluses and restore muscle memory to his hand and recuperate
from his other injuries.

As he recovered, he slowly
resumed his musical career playing with his brother Joseph and his
cousins in the bars and cafes of rural France. Around this time, he
also received his first exposure to American jazz music, hearing
imported 78 rpm records of Louis Armstrong, violinist Joe Venuti, and
others. Possessing an exceptionally keen ear and quick musical mind,
Django usually could hear a tune once and repeat it immediately back on
his guitar. Excited by the new sounds, he began incorporating the music
he heard from American artists into his own playing, experimenting with
a unique guitar style that allowed him to solo over jazz chord changes.
But this was only for fun; to earn a living he continued playing the
popular music of the day.

But by the early 1930s,
jazz was becoming the popular music of witty, sophisticated, urbane
Paris. American jazz musicians, who received a less-than-regal
treatment at home, traveled to France where music fans showered them
with accolades. One center of this new musical phenomenon was the
famous Hot Club of France, and Django was drawn to the emerging scene
like a moth to a Gypsy candle flame. Another musician, one as different
as could be, also felt the compelling pull of jazz. Stephane Grappelli
was everything Django could never be: well-educated, literate and
sophisticated. But Grappelli proved to be the perfect foil for the
mercurial, undependable guitarist. Together, they would start a
revolution still reverberating today.
At the center
was the Hot Club, which was not, in fact, a bar or night club, but an
association of jazz aficionados eager to promote this wild new music to
a Parisian audience. Led by impresario Pierre Nourry, the Hot Club
existed as a series of hot jam sessions that included the hottest jazz
musicians in France at that time. Originally built around a "house
band" of American musicians led by pianist Freddy Johnson, Nourry's Hot
Club of France was thrown off course when Johnson decided to return to
Harlem. Already familiar with Reinhardt's genius on guitar, Nourry
brought the young musician into the recording studio to lay down three
tunes. Copies were sent to leading jazz critics in Europe and to John
Hammond (who had discovered Benny Goodman, Count Basie, and Billie
Holliday, among others). The reception, however, proved negative to the
unique new string-based jazz music.
Despite the
setback, Django and his mates still found work in Paris. Bassist Louis
Volas, who had played for years with Django, had put together a
14-piece house band for a hotel ballroom in Paris that included Django
and Joseph Reinhardt, as well as Grappelli. The two future superstars
had encountered one another at times, but had never had the opportunity
to play together before.
One day, when Grappelli was
backstage with Reinhardt, the duo began improvising on the pop standard
"Dinah," with spectacular results. Soon they were performing as a full
quintet, but discovered a serious bias against their music. Without any
American musicians in the band, many French fans refused to accept
their music as true jazz; fans of traditional music found their
hard-swinging, harmonically complex arrangements too modern and
discordant. Still, Nourry pressed his vision of a successful European
jazz act, eventually landing them a recording deal with the Ultraphone
label. In December of 1934, the group arrived at a recording studio
with producer Charles Delauney, who would go on to write the definitive
Django biography in later years. Django, irrepressibly late as always,
showed up with just 90 minutes of studio time left for the session.
Hastily tuning and preparing, the group launched into their best
material, including "Dinah," "Tiger Rag," "Lady Be Good," and others.
Despite its hasty preparation, the record proved a sensation. Two
months later, the band, now officially known as the Quintette of the
Hot Club of France, opened for American jazz star Coleman Hawkins and
practically stole the show. Django's Gypsy jazz had arrived.
The group succeeded beyond even Nourry's expectations, creating a
sensational form of jazz music never heard before. The Quintette toured
Europe, England, and elsewhere, igniting guitarists and jazz fans into
a frenzy at every stop. No one had ever imagined acoustic guitar could
be so forceful and incendiary before. In addition to his obvious skills
as an improvising guitarist, Reinhardt also proved himself a consummate
composer. He and Grappelli crafted dozens of serenely swinging melodies
that the group quickly recorded. Until 1939, the Quintette was the
toast of Europe, playing to royalty and selling its albums even in
far-away America, the home of jazz.
But the coming
of the war caused a split that was never healed, with Grappelli
escaping to England to flee Nazi tyranny and Django staying behind in
Paris. Although the Gypsies were systematically persecuted and
exterminated in the notorious Nazi death camps, Reinhardt's genius was
so great even his captors treated him as a star and allowed him the
freedom to play and record during the war. At war's end, the two
musicians reunited, but the magical spirit between them had dimmed.
Grappelli, by most accounts, wanted to continue playing the smooth
swing style that so suited his silky, legato violin improvisations, but
Django had other ideas. Exposed to American bebop during his only trip
to the United States in 1947 to tour with Duke Ellington, he had become
increasingly fascinated with the intricate, demanding improvisations
and restless, unpredictable chord changes pioneered by Charlie Parker,
Dizzy Gillespie, and other top American jazz musicians.
A true artist driven by a restless need to create new sounds, Django
rebelled at the restraints placed on him by fans, club owners and
record companies who only wanted to hear the "old" Django. He
experimented with electric guitar, bringing his unique sense of
syncopation and phrasing to that instrument. But eventually, he retired
to a rented house in Samois sur Seine, a little town 30 miles south of
Paris where he lived out his days playing billiards, fly fishing, and
playing music mostly for his own amusement. He made his final
recordings in March 1953. Two months later, he left home to visit the
local tavern and suffered what later was determined to be a brain
hemorrhage. His friends carried him to a nearby hospital, but he died.
One of the greatest of all lights in improvisational music, a genius
every bit the equal of jazz greats such as Louis Armstrong, Charlie
Parker, and Wes Montgomery, was gone.
Django's Playing
Some writers have argued that Django's physical handicap actually made
him a better guitarist than had he the use of all four fingers on his
fretting hand. As John Hartford proved when he sang, "It's just my
style and style is based on limitation," there's probably more than a
grain of truth to this theory. Unable to play the linear, scale-driven
lines that fall all too easily under the fingers of most guitarists,
Django's limited mobility forced him to view the fingerboard more
vertically than horizontally. Blessed with exceptionally large hands
and long fingers (one famous photo shows him fretting the high E
through A strings of his guitar at the 14th fret with his middle finger
from the second knuckle down), he had the strength and stretch to make
wide intervals with just his first two fingers. He invented the use of
octave runs as a soloing device on guitar, another example of taking
his two-fingered limitation and making it a musical asset. Moving
beyond that, he frequently used double stop runs in colorful intervals
to generate tonal tension and resolution in his solos. Django literally
developed a new vocabulary for lead guitar, making wide interval jumps
across the strings as often as he moved up and down the strings
individually. When he did remain on one string, it was typically for a
blistering chromatic run that might start on the first fret and run all
the way up to the 13th fret. Always aware of the slightest nuance of
tone, Django honed each note perfectly, often incorporating a
beautifully modulated finger vibrato or a skillfully executed blues
bend or slur to add emotional strength to his playing. As the Django
repertoire books written by guitarist Robin Nolan show clearly, most of
Django's chord positions were simple three note chords, but his musical
genius enabled him to create diminished, suspended and augmented chords
that beautifully fit the melodies he played by adding open string notes
as needed. Although a total illiterate musically who couldn't name any
chords, he always knew what chord formation he needed to create the
musical effect he desired, either a sweet, lush chord or a jarring,
angular punctuation chord, to set the mood.
A tireless
worker, he endlessly developed a trailblazing right hand technique, as
well. Django was the first to frequently utilize what is now called
sweep picking, where a run is played with the pick pushing through
three or more strings sequentially with either a down or upstroke. His
tremolo rivaled that of the great Italian mandolin virtuosi, a skill
that he utilized on full chords and well as individual notes to great
effect. Django preferred the thickest, stiffest picks he could find,
generally using natural tortoise shell. But he never let his equipment
dominate his creative skills. Delauney's book, for instance, cites one
example where he showed up for a gig without a pick and proceeded to
break off the tooth of a comb and used that as a substitute plectrum
for the night!
Django's Recordings
Unlike other greats such as Charlie Christian who were tragically
under-recorded, Django left an astounding recorded legacy. Sources
attribute anywhere from 750 to 1,000 recorded tunes to him. Sorting
through that morass of material is nearly impossible, with many popular
tunes like "Dinah" being recorded on many sessions with different
backup musicians. In addition, many record labels have issued and
reissued numerous Django "collections," making it difficult to avoid
duplication in a collection. One great place for the neophyte to start
is the five-CD set from JSP Records. Incorporating all the Quintette's
recordings chronologically from 1934 through 1937, this set includes
124 cuts covering such great Hot Club original tunes as "Blue Drag,"
"Djangology," "Daphne," "HCQ Strut," "Appel Direct," "Swing '39,"
"Oriental Shuffle," "Swing Guitars," "Sweet Chorus," "Tears" and
"Mystery Pacific" as well as dozens of jazz standards like "Limehouse
Blues," "Avalon," "Sweet Georgia Brown" and many more. Amazon.com sells
this great set for around $25-a total bargain. With so many great CDs
out there, it's impossible to narrow down too many other selections.
One of the great pleasures of Django is searching out unusual
recordings and finding rare gems, such as his appearance with the Air
Force's American Swing Big Band, captured on the CD Swing Guitar (Jass
Records J-CD 628). Hear Django riff through "Moten Swing" with a full
big band behind him for a great example of the man's versatility and
command.
Django on the Web
Of course, these days anything you want can be found on the Web, and
there's plenty of great Django material, including MP3s of many
recordings and even some limited film footage of his playing. The best
place to start is the Django Reinhardt Swing Page
(http://www.hotclub.co.uk/), which includes historical articles on the
man and the musicians around him, great photos, a wonderful instruction
section, and numerous links to other sites containing info on Django
and other Gypsy swing musicians. Another couple of popular links are
(http://groups.yahoo.com/group/gypsyjazzguitar) , the popular Gypsy jazz
guitar newsgroup on yahoo.com and (http://www.about-django.com/ ),
although a simple Google search will turn up thousands of hits for
Django.
Django's Impact on Flatpickers
As previously stated, even the earliest flatpickers like Doc Watson and
especially Clarence White drew inspiration from Django's recordings. In
many ways, Gypsy jazz is Europe's equivalent folk music to bluegrass:
both have an unrivaled energy and vitality and utilize strong
improvisational skills over relatively simple, repeated chord changes.
Among modern players, Django's influence is easily seen. Bryan Sutton
has been deeply bitten by the Django bug, as his version of Django's
immortal "Minor Swing" on the Ready To Go CD shows. Other modern
flatpickers, including Jack Lawrence, Curtis Jones, David Grier, Roy
Curry, Jeff Autry, Robert Shafer, and others all show the Gypsy touch
in their approach to flatpicking.
|