Reinhardt, Django

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{{Infobox Guitarist
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{{epname|Reinhardt, Django}}
| name            = Django Reinhardt
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| image          = [[Image:Django9.jpg|200px]]
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{{Infobox musical artist
| born            = [[23 January]] [[1910]]<br><small>[[Liberchies]], [[Pont-à-Celles]], [[Belgium]]</small>
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|Name = Django Reinhardt  
| died            = [[16 May]] [[1953]]<br><small>[[Fontainebleau]], [[France]]</small>
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|Img_capt =
| aliases        =
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|Background = guitarists
| genre          = [[Roma music|Roma]], [[Jazz]]
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|Birth_name = Jean Baptiste Reinhardt 
| affiliation    = [[Quintette du Hot Club de France]],<br> [[Stéphane Grappelli]]
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|Alias =  
| label          =
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|Born = January 23, 1910 in [[Liberchies]], [[Pont-à-Celles]], [[Belgium]]
| notable guitars =
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|Died = May 16, 1953 in [[Fontainebleau]], [[France]]
| years          = [[1928]] - [[1953]]
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|Instrument = [[Guitar]]<br/>[[banjo]], [[clarinet]]
| website        =  
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|Genre = [[jazz]]<br/>
| audio sample    =  
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|Occupation = [[guitarists]], [[composer]]
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|Years_active =
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|Label =
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|Associated_acts =  
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|URL =  
 
}}
 
}}
  
'''Jean Baptiste "[[Django]]" Reinhardt''' ([[January 23]], [[1910]] [[May 16]], [[1953]]), the legendary gypsy jazz guitarist, is one of the most innovational European musicians of the twentieth century, having contributed to the transformation of early straight jazz to "hot jazz" with his masterful improvisational skills and long, dancing arpeggios.  
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'''Jean Baptiste "Django" Reinhardt''' (January 23, 1910 – May 16, 1953), the legendary gypsy [[jazz guitar|jazz guitarist]], is one of the most innovational [[Europe|European]] musicians of the twentieth century, having contributed to the transformation of early straight [[jazz]] into "hot jazz" with his masterful improvisational skills and long, dancing arpeggios.  
 
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Born into and raised along the caravan trail traveled by a tribe of French gypsies, or Manouches, Reinhardt picked up music early on, inheriting the assimilated stylings of his nomadic culture who moved from region to region acquiring new musical influences as they went. Django later incorporated his unique musical upbringing into the already thriving jazz scene, introducing to the world an interpretation of the genre which still holds influence today.  
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Born into and raised along the caravan trail traveled by a tribe of [[France|French]] [[gypsy|gypsies]], or ''[[Manouches]]'', Reinhardt developed a taste for music early on under the influence of a nomadic culture that was a rich melee of world music tastes. Django would later incorporate his unique musical upbringing into the already thriving jazz scene, introducing to the world an interpretation of the genre which still holds present sway. Today, there is no other jazz musician who has a whole genre developed in his wake. Django remains a cultural hero to maverick guitarists world-round who play his music as homage to the legendary architect of the "gypsy jazz" sound.
 
 
  
 
==Biography==
 
==Biography==
  
Born in [[Liberchies]], [[Pont-à-Celles]], [[Belgium]], Reinhardt spent most of his youth in [[Roma people|gypsy]] encampments close to [[Paris]], playing [[banjo]], [[guitar]] and [[violin]] from an early age professionally at [[Bal-musette]] halls in [[Paris]]. He started first on the [[violin]] and eventually moved on to a [[Guitjo|banjo-guitar]] that had been given to him and his first known recordings (in 1928) were of him playing the banjo (a banjo guitar has six strings tuned in standard guitar tuning).
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===Early Years===
[[Image:Django_Reinhardt.jpg|thumb|left|Django Reinhardt as a boy]]
 
 
 
At the age of 18 Reinhardt was injured in a fire that ravaged the caravan he shared with Bella, his first wife. They were very poor, and when the fire broke out they lost what little they had. She made imitation flowers out of celluloid and paper for her living.  Consequently, their home was full of this highly flammable material. Returning from a performance late one night, Django 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 his left hand was badly burnt. Doctors believed that he would never play guitar again and intended to amputate the leg. But he left the hospital after a short time and within a year could walk with use of a cane. 
 
 
 
His brother Joseph Reinhardt, an accomplished guitarist in his own right, bought Django a new guitar.  With painful rehabilitation and practice Django relearned his craft in a completely new way, even as his third and fourth fingers remained partially paralyzed.  Hence, he used to play solos with only two fingers, and managed to use the injured one for some chords.
 
[[Image:Django&Grappelli.jpg|right|300px|Reinhardt (left) & Grappelli (right).]]
 
In 1934, Louis Vola formed the "[[Quintette du Hot Club de France]]" with
 
Reinhardt, [[violin]]ist [[Stéphane Grappelli]], Reinhardt's brother [[Joseph Reinhardt|Joseph]] and [[Roger Chaput]] on guitar, and [[Louis Vola|himself]] on bass. Occasionally Chaput was replaced by [[Pierre Ferret|Pierre "Baro" Ferret]]. The concept of "lead guitar" (Django) and backing "rhythm guitar" (Joseph Reinhardt/Roger Chaput or Pierre Ferret) was born with that band. They also used their guitars for percussive sounds, as they had no true percussion section.
 
 
 
no other jazz musician who has a whole genre developed in his wake...gypsy jazz...cultural hero to young gypsies and play his music as an homage to him
 
  
i lost my love for travel until i realized that every molecule contains its own distinct world.  
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Born in Liberchies, Pont-à-Celles, [[Belgium]], Django's name was taken from the [[Romany]] word meaning, "I awake." Reinhardt spent most of his youth in gypsy encampments close to [[Paris]], spending carefree days immersed in music. Gypsies, frequently on the road and often with much time available to fill with the pursuit of art, were perfect conduits for the world music spirit. Django's father was a talented musician and it was from him that he learned his first instrument, the [[violin]], as a young child around camp fires. His mother, also, was a talent in her own right, often performing in song and dance on the tailgate of the caravan.  
  
gypsies, picking up music as they travel and leaving behind, were perfect conduits of the world music spirit
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Django later picked up several more instruments, the [[banjo]], [[guitar]], and a hybrid of the two, called a [[guitjo]], and profited from his rising talent at county fairs and on the streets of nearby towns. In addition, to help support the family, Django earned money by fixing musical instruments and weaving baskets. When he was 14, the young artist began his professional career accompanying the popular [[accordian|accordionist]], Guerino, in underworld Parisian dance halls.
father was a musician, mother sang and danced on the tailgate of their caravan
 
guitar virtuosa and incorporate gypsy music into his jazz
 
sometimes jaunty, sometimes sad
 
django= romany word that meant "i awake"...a first person verb that seemed to have some kind of sense of destiny
 
playing music at country fairs and at towns to earn money...fixing musical instruments, weaving baskets, etc.
 
french musicals...first learned violin from his father around camp fires, later played banjo, when he was 14 hired to play in an underworld working class dance halls of paris accompanying classical parisian accordianist...long,glorious arpeggios of notes using two fingers dashing up and down the fret board
 
  
can you do this? sir, i will die without having ever learned how to do anything remotely like this.
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===Rebirth as a Jazz Musician===
  
nazis were rounding up gypsies, nazis liked jazz, paris was the nazis brothel...greatest star was django so they spared him.  
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Reinhardt's talents and reputation as a musician in the city rose steadily, until, at the age of 18, Django knocked over a candle on his way to bed after returning home late one night after a performance. The fire ravaged the caravan and Django, in addition to losing all of his possessions, was badly injured. With first and second-degree burns covering half of his body, the doctors warned Django that he would never play the guitar again due to his badly burnt left hand, and what more they would have to amputate his paralyzed right leg. Luckily, the young artist recovered unexpectedly well and within a year was able to walk again with the use of a cane.  
  
nuage means clouds, bittersweet melancholy, ersatz anthem for the french, invoking the days before the war
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Even more miraculous was that Django, with a new guitar given to him by his brother Joseph Reinhardt—an accomplished guitarist, as well—fought through painful rehabilitation and non-stop practice to relearn his craft despite his disability. Such a feat would only be possible if Django could form a completely new method of playing developed around the permanently paralyzed third and fourth fingers of his left hand. To accomplish this, Django would use his index and middle fingers to manage the fretboard, while his other two fingers, frozen in the form of a claw, could only occassionaly be used for some chords. It was this new method centered around his deformed hand that in part contributed to Django's unique style full of the wildly choreographed arpeggios that he is famous for now.
  
didn't talk much in general, similar to harpo marx when on stage, talked through his guitar, french was his second languge, romany his first
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With a persistant nature and dedication to his craft, Reinhardt, despite the odds, transitioned from prodigy to rising virtuoso by his early twenties. It was then, in 1932 or 1933, that a friend of his invited him up to his apartment to listen to some records. One song in particular, [[Louis Armstrong]]'s "Indian Cradle Song," stirred Django to the point that he turned to his friend and muttered in awe, "Achmon, my brother, my brother..." This was Django's first encounter with jazz music, and his impression of it was that it represented incredible freedom. From that day, Reinhardt would play jazz music for the rest of his life.
  
would vanish from time to time, heard the call of nature, disappearing for a week or two weeks to play at gypsy campfires, played when the spirit moved him
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===Rise to Fame===
  
owned his own club in paris during second world war
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In 1934, [[Louis Vola]], a local bassist, discovered Joseph and Django Reinhart playing guitars together on a beach at Toulon. Vola invited them to jam with his jazz ensemble, consisting of violinist [[Stephane Grappelli]] and guitarist [[Roger Chaput]] who was sometimes replaced with [[Pierre Ferret]]. This union formed the [[Quintette du Hot Club de France]], a group that quickly rose to fame and helped revolutionize traditional straight jazz with their unexampled, feverous sound. The concept of "lead guitar" (Django) and backing "rhythm guitar" (Joseph Reinhardt/Roger Chaput or Pierre Ferret) was born with this band. They were also famous for using an inventive style of employing their guitars for percussion purposes, as they had no true percussion section.
  
pre-fire recordings? yes, but mostly where he's backing up the accordianist on the banjo...you here the viruouso, but not the arpeggios
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During this time, Django produced numerous recordings with the quintet in addition to forming other side projects with more conventional instrumentations. This included live sessions and recordings with many American Jazz legends such as [[Coleman Hawkins]], [[Benny Carter]], [[Rex Stewart]], and a jam-session with jazz legend [[Louis Armstrong]]. By the early 1940s, Django Reinhardt was considered by many to be Paris' greatest star.
  
friend took him upstairs and played him a record...1933, 1932...indian cradle song by louis armstrong turned achmon, my brother, my brother, stupifaction at this music that represented incredible freedom...played jazz for the rest of his life.
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As [[World War II]] was declared, the original [[quintet]] was on tour in the [[United Kingdom]]. Members of the quintet were hesitant to return to France where the Nazis were at work rounding up gypsies. Reinhardt, confident in the knowledge that the Nazis loved jazz music, despite Hitler's ban of the genre, would surely spare his talent. Django returned to Paris at once, leaving behind his wife and band members, and quickly reformed the quintet with [[Hubert Rostaing]] on [[clarinet]] in place of Grappelli's violin.
  
gypsy legend
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Reinhardt survived [[World War II]] unscathed, unlike many other Gypsies who perished in [[concentration camp]]s. This was in part due to the help of a [[Luftwaffe]] official named [[Dietrich Schulz-Köhn]], also known as "Doktor Jazz," who deeply admired Reinhardt's music. In 1943, Django married Sophie Ziegler in Salbris, with whom he had a son, [[Babik Reinhardt]], who went on to become a respected guitarist in his own right.
  
index finger and long finger on his fretting hand, other two fingers formed into a claw
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After the war, Reinhardt rejoined Grappelli in the UK and went on to tour the [[United States]] in 1946 with Duke Ellington's orchestra as a special guest soloist. There, he had the chance to perform at many of the country's prime venues including [[Carnegie Hall]], performing alongside notable musicians and composers such as [[Maury Deutsch]]. Despite Reinhardt's great pride in touring with Ellington, he was never properly integrated into the band, playing only a few tunes at the end of each show with no special arrangements written especially for him.
  
was definitely a family man, gypsies are famous for extended family...was around his family all the time...his brother was his rhythem guitarist
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Additional problems occurred around the dilemma of Django never having learned to tune his own guitar (he had always relied upon his brother Joseph). Allegedly, one night Reinhardt was given, on stage, an untuned guitar to play with and the great musician fumbled for five whole minutes to tune it himself. Another difficulty was that Django, used to playing the [[Selmer Maccaferri]], the guitar that he made famous, was required to play a new amplified model for the American tour. After "going electric," the results were not as well received by fans. Disappointed, Reinhardt returned to France that same year with his dreams of becoming a great American star broken, though this did not keep him from delving deeper into his career and music. One noteworthy gain from the trip to America was that he had left France playing swing, but returned thinking of beebop and modern jazz which would be the new direction he ultimately took.
  
wherever he stayed became an encampment for his extended family...had difficulty moving into normal apartments...would leave water running to sound like a stream, hated electric lights and preferred lanterns
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===Later Years===
  
one visit to u.s. and the great myth is that it was a complete disaster....1946 with duke ellington's orchestra as a special guest soloist....media couldn't fine enough superlatives for his music...was a dreamer, and thought he would become a great american star...but this didn't happen so he considered the tour a failure...came to america playing swing, returned to paris thinking of beebop and modern jazz which is the new direction he took
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As Django aged, he would spend the majority of his days re-immersing himself in gypsy life, having found it difficult to adjust to the modern world. He would sometimes show up for concerts without a guitar or amp, or wander off to the park or beach when he was due to perform. On a few occasions he even refused to get out of bed. However, he did continue to compose and entertain audiences, although irregularly, and in 1948 recruited a few [[Italy|Italian]] [[jazz]] players (on [[bass]], [[piano]], and [[snare drum]]) along with compatriot Grappelli on violin to record one of his most acclaimed contributions to the jazz world, "Djangology." On this recording, Reinhardt switched back to his old roots, as had been his style prior to the American tour, once again playing the Acoustic Selmer-Maccafferi.
  
Reinhardt later formed bands with more conventional instrumentations as with [[clarinet]] or [[saxophone]], [[piano]], [[double bass|bass]] and [[drums]]. He produced numerous recordings at this time with the quintet. But he played and recorded also with many American Jazz legends such as [[Coleman Hawkins]], [[Benny Carter]], [[Rex Stewart]] (who later stayed in Paris), and a jam-session with jazz legend [[Louis Armstrong]]. Reinhardt could neither read nor write music, and was barely literate.  Stéphane took the band's downtime to teach him.
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In 1951, he retired to Samois sur Seine, France, near Fontainebleau. He lived there for two years until May 16, 1953, when, while returning from the Avon, Seine-et-Marne train station, he collapsed outside his house from a [[brain hemorrhage]]. It took a full day for a doctor to arrive and Django was declared dead on arrival at the hospital in Fontainebleau.
  
As [[World War II]] was declared, the original [[quintet]] was on tour in the [[United Kingdom]]. Reinhardt returned to [[Paris]] at once, leaving his wife behind. Grappelli remained in the [[United Kingdom]] for the duration of the war and Reinhardt reformed the quintet in [[Paris]] with [[Hubert Rostaing]] on [[clarinet]] in place of Grappelli's violin.
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==The Nature of the Man and His Music==
  
Reinhardt survived [[World War II]] unscathed, unlike many other Gypsies who perished in the concentration [[death camp]]s of the [[Nazism|Nazis]]. It was especially hard for Django's people because jazz itself was not allowed under Hitler's regime. He had the help of a [[Luftwaffe]] official named [[Dietrich Schulz-Köhn]], also known as "Doktor Jazz", who deeply admired his music. In 1943 Django married Sophie Ziegler in Salbris, with whom he had a son, [[Babik Reinhardt]], who went on to become a respected guitarist in his own right.
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Both in his personal nature and in the nature of his music, Django displayed the character of a [[dreamer]]. Despite his exceptional natural talent, during his early career, Reinhardt, unexplicably, could neither read nor write music and was barely literate at all. Moreover, he had general difficulties living amidst the present-day culture. In his apartment, he would sometimes leave water running to mimic the sound of a stream, and he hated electric lights preferring instead lanterns.
  
After the war, Reinhardt rejoined Grappelli in the UK, and went on to tour the [[United States]], opening for [[Duke Ellington]], and playing at [[Carnegie Hall]], with many notable musicians and composers such as [[Maury Deutsch]]. Despite Reinhardt's great pride in touring with Ellington (one of his two letters to Grappelli relates this excitement), he wasn't really integrated into the band, playing only a few tunes at the end of the show, with no special arrangements written personally for him. He was used to his brother, Joseph, carrying around his guitar for him and tuning it. Allegedly, Reinhardt was given an untuned guitar to play with (discovered after strumming a chord) and it took him five whole minutes to tune it. Also, he was used to playing the [[Selmer Maccaferri]], the guitar he made famous, but he was required to play a new amplified model. After "going electric", the results were not as much liked by fans. He returned to France with broken dreams, but continued to play and make many recordings.
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Not one to talk much, he was compared to [[Harpo Marx]] when on stage, more inclined to speak through his guitar than out his mouth. As well, Reinhardt was known by his band, fans, and managers to be extremely unpredictable. He would often skip sold-out concerts to simply walk to the beach or "smell the dew." He would also periodically vanish for greater lengths, disappearing for a week or two to play at his beloved gypsy campfires. Indeed, Reinhardt was a family man, having been raised amongst the gypsy people who are famous for the alliance of their extended tribe. Django was around his family all the time; when he was not hiding out with them, they would go to where he was. Wherever he stayed, in fact, became an encampment for his extended family.
  
Django Reinhardt was among the first people in [[France]] to appreciate and understand the music of [[Charlie Parker]] and [[Dizzy Gillespie]] whom he sought after when he arrived in [[New York]]. Unfortunately they were all on tour.  
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Django's compositions were sometimes jaunty, sometimes sad. One of his most famous pieces is the melancholic "Nuages," meaning "Clouds," which became the ersatz anthem for the French, invoking the sweeter feelings of the days before the war. His music is a reflection of his serene nature, or at least his nature which compels him to seek serenity, which was most often in the comfort of his past.  
  
After returning to France, Django spent the remainder of his days re-immersed in gypsy life, having found it difficult to adjust to the modern world. He would sometimes show up for concerts without a guitar or amp, or wander off to the park or beach, and on a few occasions he refused even to get out of bed. However, he did continue to compose and is regarded as among the most advanced guitar players of [[jazz music]].
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Django Reinhardt played by and from his heart, driven to excel in his craft out of his love for it more than his duty to it. He only played when the spirit moved him, and perhaps behaved similarly in many other facets of his life, as well. Due to this nature, Django may have been a bit detached from the world of practicality, more often adrift in the realm of spirit from where his ardent affection for music stemmed from.
  
In 1948, Reinhardt recruited a few Italian jazz players (on bass, piano, and snare drum) and recorded one of his most acclaimed contributions, "Djangology", once again with his compatriot Stephane Grappelli on violin. However, his experience in the U.S. made him a different person than what Grappelli had known, influenced greatly by American jazz. But on this recording, Reinhardt switched back to his old roots, once again playing the Acoustic Selmer-Maccafferi. This recording was recently discovered by jazz enthusiasts and is now available in the U.S. and Europe.
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==Legacy==
  
In 1951, he retired to [[Samois sur Seine]], [[France]], near [[Fontainebleau]]. He lived there for two years until [[May 16]], [[1953]], when, while returning from the [[Avon, Seine-et-Marne|Avon]] train station, he collapsed outside his house from a [[brain hemorrhage]]. It took a full day for a doctor to arrive and Django was declared [[dead on arrival]] at the hospital in [[Fontainebleau]].
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Many musicians have expressed admiration for Reinhardt, including guitarist [[Jimmy McCulloch]], classical guitarist [[Julian Bream]]; country artist [[Chet Atkins]], who placed Reinhardt #1 on a list of the ten greatest guitarists of the twentieth century; Latin rocker [[Carlos Santana]]; blues legend [[B.B. King]]; the [[Grateful Dead]]'s [[Jerry Garcia]]; [[Black Sabbath]]'s [[Tony Iommi]]; [[Jimi Hendrix]]; [[Shawn Lane]]; [[Stevie Ray Vaughan]]; [[Mark Knopfler]]; [[Les Paul]]; [[Joe Pass]]; [[Peter Frampton]]; [[Denny Laine]];[[Jeff Beck]]; [[Steve Howe (guitarist)|Steve Howe]]; [[Charlie Christian]]; [[George Benson]]; [[Wes Montgomery]]; [[Martin Taylor]]; Tchavolo Schmitt; [[Stochelo Rosenberg]]; [[Biréli Lagrène]]; [[John Jorgenson]]; [[Michael Angelo Batio]]; [[Richard Thompson]]; [[Robert Fripp]]; and [[Jeff Martin (Canadian musician)|Jeff Martin]]. [[Willie Nelson]] wore a Django Reinhardt T-shirt on tour in Europe in 2002, stating in an interview that he admired Django's music and ability. The British guitarist [[Diz Disley]] plays in a style based on Reinhardt's technique and he collaborated on numerous projects with Stéphane Grappelli;  
 
 
===Distinctive features===
 
*Reinhardt and other guitarists of the Quintet of the Hot Club of France used a [[Selmer Maccaferri]] acoustic guitar.
 
*The Quintet of the Hot Club of France was one of the few well-known jazz bands to have no drums or percussion section. The percussive sounds were played on a guitar.
 
* Reinhardt was known by his band, fans, and managers to be extremely unpredictable. He would often skip sold-out concerts to simply "walk to the beach" or "smell the dew".
 
 
 
==Trivia==
 
{{Unreferencedsect|date=February 2007}}
 
===Influence on and admiration by other musicians===
 
Many musicians have expressed admiration for Reinhardt, including guitarist [[Jimmy McCulloch]], classical guitarist [[Julian Bream]]; country artist [[Chet Atkins]], who placed Reinhardt #1 on a list of the ten greatest guitarists of the 20th century (he placed himself fifth); Latin rocker [[Carlos Santana]]; blues legend [[B.B. King]]; the [[Grateful Dead]]'s [[Jerry Garcia]]; [[Black Sabbath]]'s [[Tony Iommi]]; [[Jimi Hendrix]]; [[Shawn Lane]]; [[Stevie Ray Vaughan]]; [[Mark Knopfler]]; [[Les Paul]]; [[Joe Pass]]; [[Peter Frampton]]; [[Denny Laine]];[[Jeff Beck]]; [[Steve Howe (guitarist)|Steve Howe]]; [[Charlie Christian]]; [[George Benson]]; [[Wes Montgomery]]; [[Martin Taylor]]; Tchavolo Schmitt; [[Stochelo Rosenberg]]; [[Biréli Lagrène]]; [[John Jorgenson]]; [[Michael Angelo Batio]]; [[Richard Thompson]]; [[Robert Fripp]]; and [[Jeff Martin (Canadian musician)|Jeff Martin]]. [[Willie Nelson]] wore a Django Reinhardt T-shirt on tour in Europe in 2002, stating in an interview that he admired Django's music and ability. The British guitarist [[Diz Disley]] plays in a style based on Reinhardt's technique and he collaborated on numerous projects with Stéphane Grappelli;  
 
  
 
Reinhardt also had an influence on other styles and musical genres, including [[Western Swing]], notably in the work of [[Bob Wills]].  
 
Reinhardt also had an influence on other styles and musical genres, including [[Western Swing]], notably in the work of [[Bob Wills]].  
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Musicians have paid tribute to Reinhardt in many other ways, such as by invoking his name in their own work or personal life. [[Jimi Hendrix]] is said to have named one of his bands the [[Band of Gypsys]] because of Django's music. A number of musicians named their sons Django in reference to Reinhardt, including [[David Crosby]], former [[Slade]] singer [[Noddy Holder]], [[Jerry Jeff Walker]], [[Richard Durrant]], and actors [[Nana Visitor]] and [[Raphael Sbarge]]. Jazz musician [[Django Bates]] was named after him.
 
Musicians have paid tribute to Reinhardt in many other ways, such as by invoking his name in their own work or personal life. [[Jimi Hendrix]] is said to have named one of his bands the [[Band of Gypsys]] because of Django's music. A number of musicians named their sons Django in reference to Reinhardt, including [[David Crosby]], former [[Slade]] singer [[Noddy Holder]], [[Jerry Jeff Walker]], [[Richard Durrant]], and actors [[Nana Visitor]] and [[Raphael Sbarge]]. Jazz musician [[Django Bates]] was named after him.
  
Songs written in Reinhardt's honor include "Django," composed by [[John Lewis]], which has become a jazz standard performed by musicians such as [[Miles Davis]]. The [[Modern Jazz Quartet]] titled one of their albums [[Django]] in honor of him. The [[Allman Brothers Band]] song ''[[Jessica (song)|Jessica]]'' was written by [[Dickey Betts]] in tribute to Reinhardt &mdash; he wanted to write a song that could be played using only two fingers. This aspect of the artist's work also motivated [[Black Sabbath]] guitarist [[Tony Iommi]], who was inspired by Reinhardt to keep playing guitar after a factory accident that cost him two fingertips.
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Songs written in Reinhardt's honor include "Django," composed by [[John Lewis (pianist)|John Lewis]], which has become a jazz standard performed by musicians such as [[Miles Davis]]. The [[Modern Jazz Quartet]] titled one of their albums [[Django]] in honor of him. The [[Allman Brothers Band]] song ''[[Jessica (song)|Jessica]]'' was written by [[Dickey Betts]] in tribute to Reinhardt (he wanted to write a song that could be played using only two fingers). This aspect of the artist's work also motivated [[Black Sabbath]] guitarist [[Tony Iommi]], who was inspired by Reinhardt to keep playing guitar after a factory accident that cost him two fingertips.
  
In 2005, Django Reinhardt ended on the [[66]]th place in the election of ''The Greatest Belgian'' (''[[De Grootste Belg]]'') in [[Flanders]] and on the 76th place in the [[Walloon]] version of the same competition ''[[Le plus grand belge]]''.
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In 2005, Django Reinhardt ended on the sixty-sixth place in the election of ''The Greatest Belgian'' ''([[De Grootste Belg]])'' in [[Flanders]] and on the seventy-sixth place in the [[Walloon]] version of the same competition ''[[Le plus grand belge]]''.
  
 
===Reinhardt in popular culture ===
 
===Reinhardt in popular culture ===
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*Reinhardt is portrayed in the opening sequence of the 2003 animated film ''[[Les Triplettes de Belleville]]''. The third and fourth fingers of the cartoon Reinhardt are considerably smaller than the fingers used to play the guitar.
 
*Reinhardt is portrayed in the opening sequence of the 2003 animated film ''[[Les Triplettes de Belleville]]''. The third and fourth fingers of the cartoon Reinhardt are considerably smaller than the fingers used to play the guitar.
 
* He is portrayed by guitarist John Jorgenson in the movie ''[[Head in the Clouds]]''.
 
* He is portrayed by guitarist John Jorgenson in the movie ''[[Head in the Clouds]]''.
*The song [[Johnny Depp]] plays in the river party scene in [[Lasse Hallström]]'s ''[[Chocolat (film)|Chocolat]]'' was Django and [[Stephane Grappelli|Grapelli]]'s hit, "Minor Swing".
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*The song [[Johnny Depp]] plays in the river party scene in [[Lasse Hallström]]'s ''[[Chocolat (film)|Chocolat]]'' was Django and [[Stephane Grappelli|Grapelli]]'s hit, "Minor Swing."
* Reinhardt's music has been used in the soundtrack of many films, including the oracle scene in ''[[The Matrix]]''; ''Rhythm Futur'' (95 minute mark) and ''I Can't Give You Anything But Love'' (41 minute mark) in ''[[The Aviator]]''; ''Nuages'' in ''[[Gattaca]]''; the score for Louis Malle's 1974 movie, ''Lacombe Lucien'';the background for the [[Steve Martin]] movie ''L.A. Story''; the background for a number of Woody Allen movies, including ''Stardust Memories'', where Woody's character plays a Django record; ''Honeysuckle Rose'' in the background of the Central Park carriage ride scene in ''Kate and Leopold''; during the Juilliard audition in the movie ''Daltry Calhoun''; ''Minor Swing'' and ''Blues Clair'' in ''[[Metroland (1997 film)|Metroland]]'' for which [[Mark Knopfler]] wrote the score; his rendition of ''Brazil'' can be heard on the ''"Something's Gotta Give"'' soundtrack; and ''Minor Swing'' in the scene in the painter's house in the Italian film "I Cento Passi". Reinhardt's work also figures heavily into ''B. Monkey'' and ''The Pallbearer''.
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* Reinhardt's music has been used in the soundtrack of many films, including the oracle scene in ''[[The Matrix]]''; ''Rhythm Futur'' (95 minute mark) and ''I Can't Give You Anything But Love'' (41 minute mark) in ''[[The Aviator]]''; ''Nuages'' in ''[[Gattaca]]''; the score for Louis Malle's 1974 movie, ''Lacombe Lucien''; the background for the [[Steve Martin]] movie ''L.A. Story''; the background for a number of [[Woody Allen]] movies, including ''Stardust Memories'', where Woody's character plays a Django record; ''Honeysuckle Rose'' in the background of the Central Park carriage ride scene in ''Kate and Leopold''; during the Juilliard audition in the movie ''Daltry Calhoun''; ''Minor Swing'' and ''Blues Clair'' in ''[[Metroland (1997 film)|Metroland]]'' for which [[Mark Knopfler]] wrote the score; his rendition of ''Brazil'' can be heard on the ''"Something's Gotta Give"'' soundtrack; and ''Minor Swing'' in the scene in the painter's house in the Italian film "I Cento Passi." Reinhardt's work also figures heavily into ''B. Monkey'' and ''The Pallbearer''.
 
*Reinhardt is the idol of the character Arvid in the movie ''[[Swing Kids (film)|Swing Kids]]''.  The character loses movement in two of his fingers, but is inspired to continue by Reinhardt's example.
 
*Reinhardt is the idol of the character Arvid in the movie ''[[Swing Kids (film)|Swing Kids]]''.  The character loses movement in two of his fingers, but is inspired to continue by Reinhardt's example.
 
*An extended discussion of Reinhardt takes place among several characters in the novel [[From Here to Eternity (novel)|From Here to Eternity]] by [[James Jones (author)|James Jones]].
 
*An extended discussion of Reinhardt takes place among several characters in the novel [[From Here to Eternity (novel)|From Here to Eternity]] by [[James Jones (author)|James Jones]].
 
*The character Andre Custine has a [[double bass]] that had been played by Reinhardt in the novel ''[[Century Rain]]'' by [[Alastair Reynolds]].
 
*The character Andre Custine has a [[double bass]] that had been played by Reinhardt in the novel ''[[Century Rain]]'' by [[Alastair Reynolds]].
 
*The 2002 video game ''[[Mafia: The City of Lost Heaven|Mafia]]'' used many of his songs on the soundtrack.
 
*The 2002 video game ''[[Mafia: The City of Lost Heaven|Mafia]]'' used many of his songs on the soundtrack.
*[[Sealab 2021]] paid tribute to Django in the episode "Bebop Cola". In it, Captain Murphy comments on a drink dispensed from the Bebop Cola machine: "Ahh, Mango Reinhardt! The thinking man's pop!"
+
*[[Sealab 2021]] paid tribute to Django in the episode "Bebop Cola." In it, Captain Murphy comments on a drink dispensed from the Bebop Cola machine: "Ahh, Mango Reinhardt! The thinking man's pop!"
 
*[[Harlan Ellison]]'s short story "Django" is a fantasia about a guitarist, with similarities to Reinhardt.
 
*[[Harlan Ellison]]'s short story "Django" is a fantasia about a guitarist, with similarities to Reinhardt.
 
*The [[Django web framework]], a Python web framework, was named after Reinhardt.
 
*The [[Django web framework]], a Python web framework, was named after Reinhardt.
 
*Author [[William Kotzwinkle]]'s 1989 collection, The Hot Jazz Trio stars Reinhardt in a surrealistic fantasy also featuring [[Pablo Picasso]].
 
*Author [[William Kotzwinkle]]'s 1989 collection, The Hot Jazz Trio stars Reinhardt in a surrealistic fantasy also featuring [[Pablo Picasso]].
* In the classic Italian western, "Django", the titular hero is presumably named after Reinhardt. In the climax of the movies, his hands are smashed by his enemies and he is forced to fire a gun with his wounded hands,
+
* In the classic Italian western, "Django," the titular hero is presumably named after Reinhardt. In the climax of the movies, his hands are smashed by his enemies and he is forced to fire a gun with his wounded hands,
 
* The song ''Django'' from the 1973 [[Lindsey Buckingham]] / [[Stevie Nicks]] self-titled debut album is presumably a tribute to Reinhardt.
 
* The song ''Django'' from the 1973 [[Lindsey Buckingham]] / [[Stevie Nicks]] self-titled debut album is presumably a tribute to Reinhardt.
 
* The song "Muskrat Love" by [[America (band)]] makes a comment about Django, though spelled "Jango" in the lyrics.
 
* The song "Muskrat Love" by [[America (band)]] makes a comment about Django, though spelled "Jango" in the lyrics.
Line 127: Line 104:
 
Releases
 
Releases
  
*1945 [[Paris 1945]]
+
*1945 Paris 1945
*1951 [[Django Reinhardt and the Hot Club Quintet]]
+
*1951 Django Reinhardt and the Hot Club Quintet
*1951 [[At Club St. Germain]]
+
*1951 At Club St. Germain
*1953 [[Django Reinhardt et Ses Rythmes]]
+
*1953 Django Reinhardt et Ses Rythmes
*1954 [[The Great Artistry of Django Reinhardt]]
+
*1954 The Great Artistry of Django Reinhardt
*1955 [[Django's Guitar]]
+
*1955 Django's Guitar
*1959 [[Django Reinhardt and His Rhythm]]
+
*1959 Django Reinhardt and His Rhythm
*1980 [[Routes to Django Reinhardt - Bireli Lagrene, www.jazzpoint.de]]
+
*1980 Routes to Django Reinhardt - Bireli Lagrene
*1996 [[Imagine (Django Reinhardt album)|Imagine]]
+
*1996 Imagine
*2001 [[All Star Sessions]]
+
*2001 All Star Sessions
*2001 [[Jazz in Paris: Swing 39]]
+
*2001 Jazz in Paris: Swing 39
*2002 [[Djangology (remastered)]] (recorded in 1948, discovered, remastered and released by [[Bluebird Records]])
+
*2002 Djangology (remastered) (recorded in 1948, discovered, remastered and released by [[Bluebird Records]])
*2003 [[Jazz in Paris: Nuages]]
+
*2003 Jazz in Paris: Nuages
*2003 [[Jazz in Paris: Nuits de Saint-Germain des-Prés]]
+
*2003 Jazz in Paris: Nuits de Saint-Germain des-Prés
*2004 [[Le Génie Vagabond]]
+
*2004 Le Génie Vagabond
 
*At least eight compilations have also been released.
 
*At least eight compilations have also been released.
  
== See also ==
+
==References==
*[[Gypsy jazz|Gypsy Jazz]]
+
* Delaunay, Charles. ''Django Reinhardt''. New York: Da Capo Press, 1981. ISBN 0306760576
*[[Golden Django]]
+
* Dregni, Michael. ''Django: the life and music of a Gypsy legend''. Oxford; NY: Oxford University Press, 2004. ISBN 019516752X
*[[Django Reinhardt Jazz Festival]]
+
* Kienzle, Richard. ''Great guitarists''. New York: Facts on File, 1985. ISBN 0816010293
*[[Jazz manouche]]
 
*[[List of Roma, Sinti and Mixed People]]
 
*[[Oscar Alemán]]
 
*[[Sinti]]
 
*[[List of compositions by Django Reinhardt]]
 
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
*[http://www.hotclub.co.uk/gypsyworld/ Gypsy Jazz Encyclopedia]
+
All links retrieved October 17, 2017.
*[http://www.django-liberchies.be/ Django Reinhardt Jazz Festival] held every year in [[Liberchies]], his birth village in [[Belgium]]
+
 
*[http://www.djangoreinhardt.it/ Django Reinhardt Jazz Festival in Torino Italy]
+
*[http://www.djangoreinhardt.it/ Django Reinhardt Jazz Festival] – Torino Italy  
*[http://django.samois.free.fr/ Django Reinhardt Jazz Festival] holding in [[Samois-sur-Seine]] in [[France]]
+
*[http://www.festivaldjangoreinhardt.com/ Django Reinhardt Jazz Festival] Samois-sur-Seine in France.
*[http://www.lespritmanouche.com/ Django Reinhardt Festival] held in Birmingham England.
+
*[http://djangopedia.com/wiki/index.php?title=Main_Page Djangopedia: A wiki for all Django's recordings with discography, charts, online audio and video]  
*[http://www.gainsbourg.org/vrsn3/html/zooms/djangoreinhardt/ A Tribute to Gainsbourg, zoom sur Django Reinhardt]
+
 
*[http://www.newyorker.com/critics/books/?041206crbo_books A long review by Adam Gopnik of Michael Dregni’s biography, “Django: The Life and Music of a Gypsy Legend”]
+
[[Category:Musicians]]
*[http://www.djangomontreal.com/ Comprehensive details for Django Reinhardt including a complete song & session index]
 
*[http://www.djangology.net/ Comprehensive Jazz Manouche Resources and Links]
 
*[http://djangopedia.com/wiki/index.php?title=Main_Page Djangopedia: A wiki for all Django's recordings with discography, charts, online audio and video]
 
*[http://wicaonline.com DjangoFest NW]
 
*[http://hubpages.com/hub/Django_Reinhardt_Video<Django Reinhardt Video>]
 
  
{{DEFAULTSORT:Reinhardt, Django}}
 
[[Category:Belgian Romani people]]
 
[[Category:Music]]
 
[[Category:Art, music, literature, sports and leisure]]
 
  
{{Credit|19818715433}}
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{{Credit|132761856}}

Revision as of 17:10, 18 August 2020


Django Reinhardt
Birth name Jean Baptiste Reinhardt
Born January 23, 1910 in Liberchies, Pont-à-Celles, Belgium
Died May 16, 1953 in Fontainebleau, France
Genre(s) jazz
Occupation(s) guitarists, composer
Instrument(s) Guitar
banjo, clarinet

Jean Baptiste "Django" Reinhardt (January 23, 1910 – May 16, 1953), the legendary gypsy jazz guitarist, is one of the most innovational European musicians of the twentieth century, having contributed to the transformation of early straight jazz into "hot jazz" with his masterful improvisational skills and long, dancing arpeggios.

Born into and raised along the caravan trail traveled by a tribe of French gypsies, or Manouches, Reinhardt developed a taste for music early on under the influence of a nomadic culture that was a rich melee of world music tastes. Django would later incorporate his unique musical upbringing into the already thriving jazz scene, introducing to the world an interpretation of the genre which still holds present sway. Today, there is no other jazz musician who has a whole genre developed in his wake. Django remains a cultural hero to maverick guitarists world-round who play his music as homage to the legendary architect of the "gypsy jazz" sound.

Biography

Early Years

Born in Liberchies, Pont-à-Celles, Belgium, Django's name was taken from the Romany word meaning, "I awake." Reinhardt spent most of his youth in gypsy encampments close to Paris, spending carefree days immersed in music. Gypsies, frequently on the road and often with much time available to fill with the pursuit of art, were perfect conduits for the world music spirit. Django's father was a talented musician and it was from him that he learned his first instrument, the violin, as a young child around camp fires. His mother, also, was a talent in her own right, often performing in song and dance on the tailgate of the caravan.

Django later picked up several more instruments, the banjo, guitar, and a hybrid of the two, called a guitjo, and profited from his rising talent at county fairs and on the streets of nearby towns. In addition, to help support the family, Django earned money by fixing musical instruments and weaving baskets. When he was 14, the young artist began his professional career accompanying the popular accordionist, Guerino, in underworld Parisian dance halls.

Rebirth as a Jazz Musician

Reinhardt's talents and reputation as a musician in the city rose steadily, until, at the age of 18, Django knocked over a candle on his way to bed after returning home late one night after a performance. The fire ravaged the caravan and Django, in addition to losing all of his possessions, was badly injured. With first and second-degree burns covering half of his body, the doctors warned Django that he would never play the guitar again due to his badly burnt left hand, and what more they would have to amputate his paralyzed right leg. Luckily, the young artist recovered unexpectedly well and within a year was able to walk again with the use of a cane.

Even more miraculous was that Django, with a new guitar given to him by his brother Joseph Reinhardt—an accomplished guitarist, as well—fought through painful rehabilitation and non-stop practice to relearn his craft despite his disability. Such a feat would only be possible if Django could form a completely new method of playing developed around the permanently paralyzed third and fourth fingers of his left hand. To accomplish this, Django would use his index and middle fingers to manage the fretboard, while his other two fingers, frozen in the form of a claw, could only occassionaly be used for some chords. It was this new method centered around his deformed hand that in part contributed to Django's unique style full of the wildly choreographed arpeggios that he is famous for now.

With a persistant nature and dedication to his craft, Reinhardt, despite the odds, transitioned from prodigy to rising virtuoso by his early twenties. It was then, in 1932 or 1933, that a friend of his invited him up to his apartment to listen to some records. One song in particular, Louis Armstrong's "Indian Cradle Song," stirred Django to the point that he turned to his friend and muttered in awe, "Achmon, my brother, my brother..." This was Django's first encounter with jazz music, and his impression of it was that it represented incredible freedom. From that day, Reinhardt would play jazz music for the rest of his life.

Rise to Fame

In 1934, Louis Vola, a local bassist, discovered Joseph and Django Reinhart playing guitars together on a beach at Toulon. Vola invited them to jam with his jazz ensemble, consisting of violinist Stephane Grappelli and guitarist Roger Chaput who was sometimes replaced with Pierre Ferret. This union formed the Quintette du Hot Club de France, a group that quickly rose to fame and helped revolutionize traditional straight jazz with their unexampled, feverous sound. The concept of "lead guitar" (Django) and backing "rhythm guitar" (Joseph Reinhardt/Roger Chaput or Pierre Ferret) was born with this band. They were also famous for using an inventive style of employing their guitars for percussion purposes, as they had no true percussion section.

During this time, Django produced numerous recordings with the quintet in addition to forming other side projects with more conventional instrumentations. This included live sessions and recordings with many American Jazz legends such as Coleman Hawkins, Benny Carter, Rex Stewart, and a jam-session with jazz legend Louis Armstrong. By the early 1940s, Django Reinhardt was considered by many to be Paris' greatest star.

As World War II was declared, the original quintet was on tour in the United Kingdom. Members of the quintet were hesitant to return to France where the Nazis were at work rounding up gypsies. Reinhardt, confident in the knowledge that the Nazis loved jazz music, despite Hitler's ban of the genre, would surely spare his talent. Django returned to Paris at once, leaving behind his wife and band members, and quickly reformed the quintet with Hubert Rostaing on clarinet in place of Grappelli's violin.

Reinhardt survived World War II unscathed, unlike many other Gypsies who perished in concentration camps. This was in part due to the help of a Luftwaffe official named Dietrich Schulz-Köhn, also known as "Doktor Jazz," who deeply admired Reinhardt's music. In 1943, Django married Sophie Ziegler in Salbris, with whom he had a son, Babik Reinhardt, who went on to become a respected guitarist in his own right.

After the war, Reinhardt rejoined Grappelli in the UK and went on to tour the United States in 1946 with Duke Ellington's orchestra as a special guest soloist. There, he had the chance to perform at many of the country's prime venues including Carnegie Hall, performing alongside notable musicians and composers such as Maury Deutsch. Despite Reinhardt's great pride in touring with Ellington, he was never properly integrated into the band, playing only a few tunes at the end of each show with no special arrangements written especially for him.

Additional problems occurred around the dilemma of Django never having learned to tune his own guitar (he had always relied upon his brother Joseph). Allegedly, one night Reinhardt was given, on stage, an untuned guitar to play with and the great musician fumbled for five whole minutes to tune it himself. Another difficulty was that Django, used to playing the Selmer Maccaferri, the guitar that he made famous, was required to play a new amplified model for the American tour. After "going electric," the results were not as well received by fans. Disappointed, Reinhardt returned to France that same year with his dreams of becoming a great American star broken, though this did not keep him from delving deeper into his career and music. One noteworthy gain from the trip to America was that he had left France playing swing, but returned thinking of beebop and modern jazz which would be the new direction he ultimately took.

Later Years

As Django aged, he would spend the majority of his days re-immersing himself in gypsy life, having found it difficult to adjust to the modern world. He would sometimes show up for concerts without a guitar or amp, or wander off to the park or beach when he was due to perform. On a few occasions he even refused to get out of bed. However, he did continue to compose and entertain audiences, although irregularly, and in 1948 recruited a few Italian jazz players (on bass, piano, and snare drum) along with compatriot Grappelli on violin to record one of his most acclaimed contributions to the jazz world, "Djangology." On this recording, Reinhardt switched back to his old roots, as had been his style prior to the American tour, once again playing the Acoustic Selmer-Maccafferi.

In 1951, he retired to Samois sur Seine, France, near Fontainebleau. He lived there for two years until May 16, 1953, when, while returning from the Avon, Seine-et-Marne train station, he collapsed outside his house from a brain hemorrhage. It took a full day for a doctor to arrive and Django was declared dead on arrival at the hospital in Fontainebleau.

The Nature of the Man and His Music

Both in his personal nature and in the nature of his music, Django displayed the character of a dreamer. Despite his exceptional natural talent, during his early career, Reinhardt, unexplicably, could neither read nor write music and was barely literate at all. Moreover, he had general difficulties living amidst the present-day culture. In his apartment, he would sometimes leave water running to mimic the sound of a stream, and he hated electric lights preferring instead lanterns.

Not one to talk much, he was compared to Harpo Marx when on stage, more inclined to speak through his guitar than out his mouth. As well, Reinhardt was known by his band, fans, and managers to be extremely unpredictable. He would often skip sold-out concerts to simply walk to the beach or "smell the dew." He would also periodically vanish for greater lengths, disappearing for a week or two to play at his beloved gypsy campfires. Indeed, Reinhardt was a family man, having been raised amongst the gypsy people who are famous for the alliance of their extended tribe. Django was around his family all the time; when he was not hiding out with them, they would go to where he was. Wherever he stayed, in fact, became an encampment for his extended family.

Django's compositions were sometimes jaunty, sometimes sad. One of his most famous pieces is the melancholic "Nuages," meaning "Clouds," which became the ersatz anthem for the French, invoking the sweeter feelings of the days before the war. His music is a reflection of his serene nature, or at least his nature which compels him to seek serenity, which was most often in the comfort of his past.

Django Reinhardt played by and from his heart, driven to excel in his craft out of his love for it more than his duty to it. He only played when the spirit moved him, and perhaps behaved similarly in many other facets of his life, as well. Due to this nature, Django may have been a bit detached from the world of practicality, more often adrift in the realm of spirit from where his ardent affection for music stemmed from.

Legacy

Many musicians have expressed admiration for Reinhardt, including guitarist Jimmy McCulloch, classical guitarist Julian Bream; country artist Chet Atkins, who placed Reinhardt #1 on a list of the ten greatest guitarists of the twentieth century; Latin rocker Carlos Santana; blues legend B.B. King; the Grateful Dead's Jerry Garcia; Black Sabbath's Tony Iommi; Jimi Hendrix; Shawn Lane; Stevie Ray Vaughan; Mark Knopfler; Les Paul; Joe Pass; Peter Frampton; Denny Laine;Jeff Beck; Steve Howe; Charlie Christian; George Benson; Wes Montgomery; Martin Taylor; Tchavolo Schmitt; Stochelo Rosenberg; Biréli Lagrène; John Jorgenson; Michael Angelo Batio; Richard Thompson; Robert Fripp; and Jeff Martin. Willie Nelson wore a Django Reinhardt T-shirt on tour in Europe in 2002, stating in an interview that he admired Django's music and ability. The British guitarist Diz Disley plays in a style based on Reinhardt's technique and he collaborated on numerous projects with Stéphane Grappelli;

Reinhardt also had an influence on other styles and musical genres, including Western Swing, notably in the work of Bob Wills.

Musicians have paid tribute to Reinhardt in many other ways, such as by invoking his name in their own work or personal life. Jimi Hendrix is said to have named one of his bands the Band of Gypsys because of Django's music. A number of musicians named their sons Django in reference to Reinhardt, including David Crosby, former Slade singer Noddy Holder, Jerry Jeff Walker, Richard Durrant, and actors Nana Visitor and Raphael Sbarge. Jazz musician Django Bates was named after him.

Songs written in Reinhardt's honor include "Django," composed by John Lewis, which has become a jazz standard performed by musicians such as Miles Davis. The Modern Jazz Quartet titled one of their albums Django in honor of him. The Allman Brothers Band song Jessica was written by Dickey Betts in tribute to Reinhardt (he wanted to write a song that could be played using only two fingers). This aspect of the artist's work also motivated Black Sabbath guitarist Tony Iommi, who was inspired by Reinhardt to keep playing guitar after a factory accident that cost him two fingertips.

In 2005, Django Reinhardt ended on the sixty-sixth place in the election of The Greatest Belgian (De Grootste Belg) in Flanders and on the seventy-sixth place in the Walloon version of the same competition Le plus grand belge.

Reinhardt in popular culture

Movies

  • Reinhardt is the idol of the fictional 1930s guitarist Emmet Ray (played by Sean Penn), who passes out upon meeting Django in the Woody Allen film Sweet and Lowdown (1999).
  • Reinhardt is portrayed in the opening sequence of the 2003 animated film Les Triplettes de Belleville. The third and fourth fingers of the cartoon Reinhardt are considerably smaller than the fingers used to play the guitar.
  • He is portrayed by guitarist John Jorgenson in the movie Head in the Clouds.
  • The song Johnny Depp plays in the river party scene in Lasse Hallström's Chocolat was Django and Grapelli's hit, "Minor Swing."
  • Reinhardt's music has been used in the soundtrack of many films, including the oracle scene in The Matrix; Rhythm Futur (95 minute mark) and I Can't Give You Anything But Love (41 minute mark) in The Aviator; Nuages in Gattaca; the score for Louis Malle's 1974 movie, Lacombe Lucien; the background for the Steve Martin movie L.A. Story; the background for a number of Woody Allen movies, including Stardust Memories, where Woody's character plays a Django record; Honeysuckle Rose in the background of the Central Park carriage ride scene in Kate and Leopold; during the Juilliard audition in the movie Daltry Calhoun; Minor Swing and Blues Clair in Metroland for which Mark Knopfler wrote the score; his rendition of Brazil can be heard on the "Something's Gotta Give" soundtrack; and Minor Swing in the scene in the painter's house in the Italian film "I Cento Passi." Reinhardt's work also figures heavily into B. Monkey and The Pallbearer.
  • Reinhardt is the idol of the character Arvid in the movie Swing Kids. The character loses movement in two of his fingers, but is inspired to continue by Reinhardt's example.
  • An extended discussion of Reinhardt takes place among several characters in the novel From Here to Eternity by James Jones.
  • The character Andre Custine has a double bass that had been played by Reinhardt in the novel Century Rain by Alastair Reynolds.
  • The 2002 video game Mafia used many of his songs on the soundtrack.
  • Sealab 2021 paid tribute to Django in the episode "Bebop Cola." In it, Captain Murphy comments on a drink dispensed from the Bebop Cola machine: "Ahh, Mango Reinhardt! The thinking man's pop!"
  • Harlan Ellison's short story "Django" is a fantasia about a guitarist, with similarities to Reinhardt.
  • The Django web framework, a Python web framework, was named after Reinhardt.
  • Author William Kotzwinkle's 1989 collection, The Hot Jazz Trio stars Reinhardt in a surrealistic fantasy also featuring Pablo Picasso.
  • In the classic Italian western, "Django," the titular hero is presumably named after Reinhardt. In the climax of the movies, his hands are smashed by his enemies and he is forced to fire a gun with his wounded hands,
  • The song Django from the 1973 Lindsey Buckingham / Stevie Nicks self-titled debut album is presumably a tribute to Reinhardt.
  • The song "Muskrat Love" by America (band) makes a comment about Django, though spelled "Jango" in the lyrics.

Discography

Releases

  • 1945 Paris 1945
  • 1951 Django Reinhardt and the Hot Club Quintet
  • 1951 At Club St. Germain
  • 1953 Django Reinhardt et Ses Rythmes
  • 1954 The Great Artistry of Django Reinhardt
  • 1955 Django's Guitar
  • 1959 Django Reinhardt and His Rhythm
  • 1980 Routes to Django Reinhardt - Bireli Lagrene
  • 1996 Imagine
  • 2001 All Star Sessions
  • 2001 Jazz in Paris: Swing 39
  • 2002 Djangology (remastered) (recorded in 1948, discovered, remastered and released by Bluebird Records)
  • 2003 Jazz in Paris: Nuages
  • 2003 Jazz in Paris: Nuits de Saint-Germain des-Prés
  • 2004 Le Génie Vagabond
  • At least eight compilations have also been released.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Delaunay, Charles. Django Reinhardt. New York: Da Capo Press, 1981. ISBN 0306760576
  • Dregni, Michael. Django: the life and music of a Gypsy legend. Oxford; NY: Oxford University Press, 2004. ISBN 019516752X
  • Kienzle, Richard. Great guitarists. New York: Facts on File, 1985. ISBN 0816010293

External links

All links retrieved October 17, 2017.


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