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Length: 2:44
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How was he so good?
Kind of a contradictory statement n'est ce pas?
Any criticism of this Man or anything he ever played, is ignorance.
.
.
. The Great Django Reinhardt
.
You'd have to be asleep if they weren't- great stuff!
Landing on to a manage takes place.
By then household already was a household word.
Why do you ply me with Limey in blues is a favor.
He kept all of his fingers, but his ring finger and pinky were mostly paralyzed. Yes, brilliant playing.
Aw, SO close.. let me rephrase: I see every reason to play this over and over.
This has got just as much energy and jubilation in it as does the greatest rock'n roll, punk or funk, just to name a few this-drives-me-crazy genres that come to mind.
Wanna jump all around my kitchen when I hear this!
( first time I'm using the banana icon, fits perfectly!)
Ditto! Thank you Richard Thompson for telling me about Django!!!
Awesome! Was that in person or in concert?! Love this tune, and Thompson seems to have a true appreciation for this kind of mastery...
Funny, I was expecting the Spanish Inquisition....
Besides, rats are vermin: they spread diseases, destroy property, etc. Shooting them is more humane than most other methods of extermination.
Yea...back then it was LEGAL.
https://translate.google.com/translate?hl=en&sl=fr&tl=en&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.caravan-palace.fr%2F
https://www.caravan-palace.fr
Saw them on Monday night and this was exactly what I thought.... great band!
No need to hit the gym!
You're not? Get with the program, man.
Funny, I was expecting the Spanish Inquisition....
Come on, Bobert. Nobody expects the Spanish Inquisition!
Funny, I was expecting the Spanish Inquisition....
This is another blinder.
... I don't think that popular music is something that has to be taken "seriously"; it's culture, not oncology.
Best line ever. Thank you!
https://translate.google.com/translate?hl=en&sl=fr&tl=en&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.caravan-palace.fr%2F
https://www.caravan-palace.fr
Jimmy Rosenburg's (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jimmy_Rosenberg) another. AKA "Sinti". Smokin'!
Ditto! Thank you Richard Thompson for telling me about Django!!!
And to Al Stewart/Laurence Juber (check out the former's "Between the Wars," featuring the latter for several Djangoesque, very period numbers), I owe thanks for the DR influence.
https://translate.google.com/translate?hl=en&sl=fr&tl=en&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.caravan-palace.fr%2F
https://www.caravan-palace.fr
Thanx for the information. Sounds like I could like this.
Django Reinhardt is beyond any discussion in my opinion. This is truly outstanding and has so much STYLE
In this case, I like it - definitely not something you are every going to hear on the FM dial.
POW !!!..or bang..
Ditto! Thank you Richard Thompson for telling me about Django!!!
Django and Bordello jump off a bridge!
pppffffffffffff...!!!!
PS
I am missing my watch!
And my gold-chain!
And my car!
And my wife!
Ha!!!
https://translate.google.com/translate?hl=en&sl=fr&tl=en&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.caravan-palace.fr%2F
https://www.caravan-palace.fr
Django and Bordello jump off a bridge!
pppffffffffffff...!!!!
PS
I am missing my watch!
And my gold-chain!
And my car!
And my wife!
I know what you mean about the "old cartoons", but that doesn't ruin it for me. I don't think that popular music is something that has to be taken "seriously"; it's culture, not oncology.
OK Now you know!
Bill
Born in Liberchies, Pont-à-Celles, Belgium, Reinhardt's nickname "Django" is Romani for "I awake." He spent most of his youth in Romani (Gypsy) encampments close to Paris, playing banjo, guitar and violin from an early age, and professionally at Bal-musette halls in Paris. He started first on the violin and eventually moved on to a banjo-guitar that had been given to him as a gift. His first known recordings (in 1928) were of him playing the banjo.
At the age of 18, Reinhardt was injured in a fire that ravaged the caravan he shared with Florine "Bella" Mayer, his first wife. They were very poor, and to supplement their income Bella made imitation flowers out of celluloid and paper. Consequently, their home was full of this highly flammable material. Returning from a performance late one night, Reinhardt apparently knocked over a candle on his way to bed. While his family and neighbors were quick to pull him to safety, he received first- and second-degree burns over half his body. His right leg was paralyzed and the third and fourth fingers of his left hand were badly burned. Doctors believed that he would never play guitar again and intended to amputate one of his legs. Reinhardt refused to have the surgery and left the hospital after a short time; he was able to walk within a year with the aid of a cane.
His brother Joseph Reinhardt, an accomplished guitarist himself, bought Django a new guitar. With rehabilitation and practice he relearned his craft in a completely new way, even as his third and fourth fingers remained partially paralyzed. He played all of his guitar solos with only two fingers, and used the two injured digits only for chord work.
Not bad for aguy with only two functional fingers on his left hand huh?
Handy for insulting gestures too...
\Tally Ho !
You seem to understand TV very well. Perhaps you should have stuck to it.
What a bizarre thing to say... Without Django, there is no Emmet Ray. Nobody knows that better than Emmet Ray.
wtf
great.
Written by:aidan Friday, June 29, 2007 .......................One of our favourite Django stories (and there are loads out there) tells of the time that the Belgian royal family, huge fans of his music, invited him to dinner in their palace in Brussels. When salad was served Django ignored the cutlery and began eating with his fingers. After several seconds of stunned silence the royals, not wanting to offend him, also began eating their salad with their fingers.
When I was a kid, one day a woman from our village neighbourhood and mother of one of my buddies dropped by and brought us two or three racks with single records someone had sorted out for garbage. And one of them - yes indeed! - turned out to be full of Reinhardt recordings, which by then were legend already!
Sadly, I don't know where they ended up. But I will always esteem that woman for what she did. She was not very cultured, precisely, but obviously felt an impulse to save something she thought could be precious though she would not appreciate it.
Now looking back, I think it was an experience that shaped me in many ways.
Thank you for sharing that. It is a beautiful story.
I just finished having a rather protracted conversation with a friend about folks doing things like what your friend's mother did.
My friend was searching for a term for this sort of behavior. I did a little research and I think the term reciprocal altruism works.
Would that more of us saw fit to act in such a manner.
When I was a kid, one day a woman from our village neighbourhood and mother of one of my buddies dropped by and brought us two or three racks with single records someone had sorted out for garbage. And one of them - yes indeed! - turned out to be full of Reinhardt recordings, which by then were legend already!
Sadly, I don't know where they ended up. But I will always esteem that woman for what she did. She was not very cultured, precisely, but obviously felt an impulse to save something she thought could be precious though she would not appreciate it.
Now looking back, I think it was an experience that shaped me in many ways.
Not bad for aguy with only two functional fingers on his left hand huh?
I feel better now -time for lunch!
What a bizarre thing to say... Without Django, there is no Emmet Ray. Nobody knows that better than Emmet Ray.
Ooooh - I think I'll upload Belleville Rendez-Vous to the LRC!
Ah, could be! Been driving me nuts. I thought it was from an old Woody Allen movie, like "Sleeper".
you won't be sorry!
Why am I picturing Spanky and Alfalfa chasing Stymie and Weezer around in a circle?