Manouche Maestro |
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Django Guitarist's
Advice
It’s too easy to sound like a half-decent manouche guitarist if the guitar just oozes "that sound". The deep-down secrets are actually: Numbers 3, 4 and 5 in this list may seem pretty obvious, but they’re a lot harder to crack than you might think (especially if you’ve been playing guitar for a decade or two).
Finally, the odds are that the old plank sounds awful, so you’ll start using serious finger vibrato while attacking the strings with your right hand. And that’s the secret to tone, basically. Oh – and string the bugger up with flatwound 12s. They’re even harder to play, and sound particularly bad on most guitars. If you don’t have a crap guitar, buy one – 1960s "student" archtops are pretty cheap and almost always horrible. If you can’t buy something crap enough, go for a Hofner Congress or something like that – not exactly "crap" but totally inappropriate!
Most rock/folk/jazz guitarists rest their fingers on the guitar while
playing, holding the pick delicately between thumb and forefinger (or
middle-finger). This won’t do. Clench your fist and then park the plectrum
(which should be seriously heavy – like 3mm thick) at 90 degrees to
your thumb. Clamp it there. Play like this. It’ll hurt (a lot – but you’ve
got that tennis thing to build up your wrist) but that’s what you gotta do.
Honestly. Look at the old photos: no fingers on the box... I
mean really learn the chords. Not the chords you already know. Unless
you’ve been dicking around on an ES-175 for forty years the odds are that
you know lots of chords that have your hands in completely the wrong
position and that you’ll never use in manouche jazz. Get Mickey Baker’s book
on Jazz Guitar and look at the first few pages. Learn every one of the
chords. Properly. Then string them into sequences and get these off pat.
Then do it again. And again...
Boring? Yes. Essential? Also.
Most jazz standards are in awful keys for the guitar – eleven flats, and the
like. Transpose them into something civilised like G major and then learn
the rhythm part (using modified chords you’ve learnt earlier – and with the
assumption that "G" never means "G", probably means "G6", but could be
anything...). Then practice that rhythm part until you can produce the best
rhythm part for Sweet Georgia Brown (or whatever...) that anyone’s
ever done. Then build on the rhythm part, imagining Grappelli’s doing his
solo while you vamp. To stay fresh, try to be Eddie Lang behind Joe Venuti.
That’s what Django did, after all...
You probably grew up listening to the Beatles, the Stones, Nirvana or that
Spears woman. It doesn’t matter – remove all these things from your life.
Listen exclusively to French valses, flamenco, Bach, Satchmo’s Hot Seven and
the like.
Forget the backing tapes. Just pick up a guitar and make beautiful music.
Don’t worry about what you’re playing, just play.... When you
spouse/parents/offspring/SO/poodle think it sounds nice, move on to... You are now ready. It’s time to phone up Maurice Dupont (or your luthier of choice). You’ll be relatively scrappy, but you won’t actually embarrass yourself. And you’ll sound a lot better than you used to... And if you’ve reached this stage in less than 6 months, you’re either a genius or you’re lying to yourself.... By Mike
Hardaker |
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