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DjangoBy Michael Dregni A favorite photograph of Django Reinhardt pictures him standing alongside Stéphane Grappelli, the duo looking suave and sophisticated in white tuxedos. The photograph is steeped in the aura of 1930s Paris, where the Quintette du Hot Club de France was formed: charming, cool, classy. Grappelli—Django's musical partner and foil, rival and co-composer—holds his magic violin under his arm. Django leans casually [sic] on his famous Selmer guitar, his left hand carefully placed in his suit pocket to hide his disfigurement. This is the hand that he not only learned to play in spite of, but the hand that also shaped his style due to its limitations.
Above all, Django's smile seems to hold the key to his music. The Music
When Django begins to play, that's when the listener is hooked.
The Legend
He was born in a gypsy caravan during the night of January 23, 1910, near the Belgian town of Liberchies, neighboring Charleroi. His unmarried mother, known to audiences as "La Belle Laurence," was a dancer and acrobat working with a wandering troupe of Gypsy comedians and musicians.
Some 2,000 years ago, the Gypsy tribe known as the Sinti are believed to have migrated from the banks of the Sinti River in India (from which they derived their name) to the Persian court, where they found work as musicians. From Persia, the Gypsies traveled what is known as the Romany trail leading through the Middle East, into North Africa and Europe. Europeans, believing these wandering people to come from Egypt, corrupted their name into "Gypsy." Often chased away from "civilization," the Gypsies have become nomadic of necessity more than desire. Forced to live a transitory life, they managed to survive on their skills as musicians, entertainers, metalsmiths, and traders. They have become a people of the diaspora, without a homeland and without a promised land.
Django learned to play first violin, then banjo. The banjo was the prime rhythm instrument before the ascendance of the guitar as the banjo's unamplified resonator blessed it with volume and the cutting, trebly tone gave it the power to accompany an accordeon. Django, still in his teens, played banjo, then guitar, with the popular Italian Gypsy accordeonist Vetese Guérino and others in the cafés, dancehalls, night clubs, and at the bals des Auvergnats, named for the people of the French province of Auvergne who migrated to the city, bringing the folk music that became a source of musette. Playing his instrument, Django appeared to have a rare talent as a musician, an ability respected and admired among Gypsies. As Charles Delaunay, Django's French friend and manager, wrote in his colorful biography of the guitarist: "As water is a fish's element and the air a bird's, music was Django's." The TragedyAnd then tragedy struck. At one o'clock in the morning of November 2, 1928, Django returned from a club to his caravan. His first wife, known to history only as Bella, had fashioned flowers from the highly flammable proto-plastic, celluloid, to sell in the market; a candle Django was holding ignited the celluloid and in minutes the caravan was aflame. Django and his wife escaped, but not before Django suffered horrible burns over half of his body.
But while bed-ridden and recovering, Django taught himself, slowly and surely, to play again. Grappelli himself explained it best in a 1954 interview with the British music magazine Melody Maker after Django's death: "He acquired amazing dexterity with those first two fingers, but that didn't mean he never employed the others. He learned to grip the guitar with his little finger on the E string and the next finger on the B. That accounts for some of those chord progressions which Django was probably the first to perform on the guitar." The Jazz
Django's playing with the QHCF in its glory years of 1937-1939 was thoroughly modern, infused by the wild, free, exciting sound of American jazz that transformed the old into the new. Swing supercharged the music, and the sound of the QHCF came to define an era.
Django, however, was an audacious pioneer, infusing musette with jazz. Initially, musette and swing were two camps of musical styles that did not want to mix: As the great accordeonist Jo Privat recalled, "There were ‘No swing dancing' signs in musette ballrooms. Swing could provoke brawls. Guys who like to hold their girls tight didn't like that." But to Django, it was the swing that made it mean something. As Delaunay quotes Django himself: "Jazz attracted me because in it I found a formal perfection and instrumental precision that I admire in classical music, but which popular music doesn't have."
The Man
Listen to these stories that illuminate Django the man: He was terrified of ghosts. He could not stop himself from gambling. He adored movies, particularly American gangster films, and from them developed a fondness for wide-brimmed hats that he liked to perch askew on his head and tuck over one eye. He was amazingly adept at games, from pinball to pool. He had a pet monkey.
And there was Django's pride, illustrated by the story of how the Hot Club quartet became a quintet. Grappelli told the tale: "I could see something was worrying Django. And when I asked him what the trouble was one day, he replied: 'It doesn't matter all that much. It's just that when you're playing, Stéphane, you've got both [QHCF guitarist Roger] Chaput and me backing you, but when I'm soloing I've only got one guitar behind me!'" With that, Django's brother Joseph was hired as a second rhythm guitarist.
And finally there was his innocence, a Gypsy out of step with the modern world. Again, Grappelli told the story, telling of how the Hot Club was invited to dine with the king of Belgium during a Belgian tour. Django, not knowing better, ate his lettuce with his fingers—but, as Grappelli remembered, he somehow did it with great style and class so it seemed alright. The New BeginningWorld War II split the cornerstones of the QHCF: Django stayed in France while Grappelli was in England. Freed from the confines of the QHCF, Django could explore other venues and band arrangements, setting the stage for a second era of Django's music as he broadened his vocabulary of styles.
During the 1940s, Django experimented with going electric. Devoted to his acoustic Selmer guitar but having trouble cutting through the sound of the larger bands he was playing in, he affixed a magnetic French-made Stimer pickup to the petite bouche soundhole. The sound created a new dimension in his playing, which is infused with bebop he heard in America. The Coda
Django was in semi-retirement, playing now and then, but spending more time fishing. On May 15, 1953, he was struck by a fatal stroke. He was but forty-three years old. Django Reinhardt lived a long life in his forty-three years. It's impossible to sum up his influence on jazz as that influence continues to this day. Matelo Ferret's sons Boulou and Elios Ferré still carry Django's torch to the extremes of musical creativity, and Gypsy jazz is currently in a renaissance with Hot Club bands in Japan, Norway, Sardinia, San Francisco, and almost anywhere else that jazz is heard. Perhaps it's best for Django's old cohort, Stéphane Grappelli, to have the final word. He summed up Django's playing in the 1954 Melody Maker interview: "He did more for the guitar than any other man in jazz. His way of playing was unlike anyone else's, and jazz is different because of him. There can be many other fine guitarists, but never can there be another Reinhardt. I am sure of that." |