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#264345 by DainNobody
Mon Aug 15, 2016 7:24 pm
sounds like the guitar is out of tune?
#264347 by DainNobody
Mon Aug 15, 2016 7:31 pm
probably some obscure eastern aramaic music tuning from the archaic past or something, I liked it though, you can dance to it..
#264349 by Planetguy
Mon Aug 15, 2016 7:53 pm
Jookeyman wrote:OK, here's the classic 'Stompin' @ the Savoy'. If you put on a set of headphones and turn the volume up to the approximate volume this was recorded @ (double bass and skins), the guitar is killing it. Tone to DIE for, buddy!! He definitely has it dimed out cause you know he's probably pushing 10 watts(??).
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x52x5hjpD5k


Super big Charlie Christian fan here. What an amazing trailblazer he was.....killer tone, phrasing, and a bottomless well of super cool ideas. He just had the total "horn thing" going.
#264358 by DainNobody
Mon Aug 15, 2016 10:29 pm
I sure hope his tuning fork was not acting up..
#264361 by Planetguy
Mon Aug 15, 2016 11:46 pm
Jookeyman wrote:
Planetguy wrote:Super big Charlie Christian fan here. What an amazing trailblazer he was.....killer tone, phrasing, and a bottomless well of super cool ideas. He just had the total "horn thing" going.


Totally w/ you, especially the bottomless well. I don't hear any clichés except maybe that 6#9 interval (which pre-dates rockabilly by 15 years, +/-). I use that move a lot but I picked it up from Rockabilly.

What pulls me to Christian is the blues vibe. You catch this in his feel, unlike Reinhardt who sounds straight up Euro to me. I like both but gravitate more toward the blues side (since Jazz was born in the Blues). The Roma thing comes from Eastern European folk music, if I'm not mistaken. When I listen to Django, I hear some of this influence- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sC2yEFpacIE


the big differences that i hear and consider important....Django like the other European musicians of that itme were getting their "jazz" second hand from American records and during the war from Allied Radio. so back then (and some would say 'Still') they just didn't SWING the way our homeboys did.

Much of gypsy jazz....all that minor key stuff is usually out of harmonic minor.....OUR (early) jazz not so much so....

yes, there's the bluesy thing that Christian always had going for him in all his stuff....but the other huge thing that's going on is that he's playing straight up BEBOP! you don't hear that in Django's stuff ( well some in his later stuff when he started playing electric). and Christian's groove was just ridiculous...that guy had such grease!

most people credit Diz, Bird, and Bud Powell for creating Bebop...but there's plenty of folks (like me) who believe it was actually Charlie Christian. who was playing bebop scales before him? and leaning so heavily on chord extensions???? maybe SOMEONE was... but if so, there's no recorded evidence.
#264364 by DainNobody
Tue Aug 16, 2016 4:25 am
Planetguy wrote:
Jookeyman wrote:
Planetguy wrote:Super big Charlie Christian fan here. What an amazing trailblazer he was.....killer tone, phrasing, and a bottomless well of super cool ideas. He just had the total "horn thing" going.


Totally w/ you, especially the bottomless well. I don't hear any clichés except maybe that 6#9 interval (which pre-dates rockabilly by 15 years, +/-). I use that move a lot but I picked it up from Rockabilly.

What pulls me to Christian is the blues vibe. You catch this in his feel, unlike Reinhardt who sounds straight up Euro to me. I like both but gravitate more toward the blues side (since Jazz was born in the Blues). The Roma thing comes from Eastern European folk music, if I'm not mistaken. When I listen to Django, I hear some of this influence- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sC2yEFpacIE


the big differences that i hear and consider important....Django like the other European musicians of that itme were getting their "jazz" second hand from American records and during the war from Allied Radio. so back then (and some would say 'Still') they just didn't SWING the way our homeboys did.

Much of gypsy jazz....all that minor key stuff is usually out of harmonic minor.....OUR (early) jazz not so much so....

yes, there's the bluesy thing that Christian always had going for him in all his stuff....but the other huge thing that's going on is that he's playing straight up BEBOP! you don't hear that in Django's stuff ( well some in his later stuff when he started playing electric). and Christian's groove was just ridiculous...that guy had such grease!

most people credit Diz, Bird, and Bud Powell for creating Bebop...but there's plenty of folks (like me) who believe it was actually Charlie Christian. who was playing bebop scales before him? and leaning so heavily on chord extensions???? maybe SOMEONE was... but if so, there's no recorded evidence.

Benny Goodman thought "good musicians are a dime a dozen", and John Hammond thought Christian would make a nice fit however, so Goodman counted the band into "Rose Room" a tune that a black guitar picker from Oklahoma was unlikely to know, of course he was unaware that Christian needed to hear a chord sequence just one time in order to improvise with total ease, instead of being "caught out" Christian played superb solos chorus after chorus..45 minutes later the band finished the number to be greeted by the greatest ovation that Hammond had ever seen a Goodman group receive.. that night the Benny Goodman quintet became a sextet..

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x4H7M2YFK0s "Rose Room" 1939 Benny Goodman featuring Charlie Christian
#264365 by DainNobody
Tue Aug 16, 2016 4:36 am
Rose Room was written in 1917 however.. it was 22 year old tune in 1939. :)

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