DjangoBooks.com

Alternative Guitars

BohemianBohemian State of Jefferson✭✭✭✭
I am curious if there are any Gypsy Jazz guitar players who use something other than the SEL/MAC or clones . An example would be Sephora who started off using Martin Drednaughts, or Oscar Aleman and the National Tri-Cone
Specifically interested in players that use archtops, particularly Europeans.
Looks like Paulus Schafer could be listed.

Also interested in any recording of these instruments playing Gypsy JAzz.

Also what ever happened to the Dell Arte f hole model a Di Mauro I believe. Never did get to hear one of these.


Also check out a luthoer in Switzerland named Piquet, ( web site I belive) and his interpretation of a Gypsy JAzz guitar.


Thanks

Comments

  • mmaslanmmaslan Santa Barbara, CANew
    Posts: 87
  • BohemianBohemian State of Jefferson✭✭✭✭
    Posts: 303
  • BohemianBohemian State of Jefferson✭✭✭✭
    Posts: 303
  • CuimeanCuimean Los AngelesProdigy
    Posts: 271
    Here's a site with tons of weird old German archtops:

    http://jazzgitarren.k-server.org/menu.html

    Check out the Lang guitars. They're pretty attractive, and one model even has a Selmer-style cutaway.

    I've heard that some of the Alsatian and German players used Framus and other German brand archtops. Makes sense; if you're not a gear fetishist (no offense, guys) and you can't afford an imported guitar, you'll use what's cheap and available.

    I've mentioned The Easy Club on this site before; they were a Scottish band that played Scots songs with Eddie Lang/Django-influenced rhythms. They played guitars made by Stefan Sobell that attempted to combine characteristics of arched and flat topped guitars. There are pictures here:

    http://www.sobellinstruments.com/

    Here's Fylde's interpretation of the Selmer style:

    http://www.fyldeguitars.com/egyptian.html

    And the Grimes version:

    http://www.grimesguitars.com/models/jazz_fs.html

    As far as non-Sel/Mac players...many on this site have discussed Ninine Garcia's playing. On his latest album, he uses an Epiphone archtop. I believe Hans'che Weiss and Bobby Falta also play electric archtops. Babik played a 335. And as far as someone like Aleman goes, I'd say it's hard to apply our sort of gear dogma to that generation of players. Gibson and Epiphones were certainly the most visible guitars in jazz from that era, but there were also plenty of folks around the world playing other varieties. I've seen photos of '30's American guitarists with regular Martin flattops, 12-string guitars, resonators, and so on. Europeans had their own local brands and makes; some played imported archtops, some played flattops, some played homemade guitars assembled from scrap wood (Joseph, I'm looking in your direction).
  • PaganiniPaganini New
    Posts: 74
    I think it's great to use an arch-top for soloing in the gypsyjazz-style but I have my doubts about how suitable it is for the gypsyjazz rythme, at least I do not manage to get a good rythme sound.

    On our website I play a solo over Minor Swing with a Washburn Montgomery. To create some variation in the sound of your band it's nice to use an electric jazzguitar now and then.
  • Bob HoloBob Holo Moderator
    Posts: 1,252
    Wow - that's interesting. I have just the opposite reaction to archtops. Unless they're amplified, I don't find that they have the volume necessary to pick (what little picking I do) but I find that (pre-Benedetto) archtops can be great for acoustic rhythm. Nice ones like Epiphones / Gibsons / Vegas are dry and very choppy. It's hard to get that Gypsy gracenote cha-Chunk... because the strings are stiffer, but for straight-four it's a dream. A gent from a swing band in the midwest clued me in to the way to do Gypsy rhythm on an acoustic archtop - really get a steep pick angle (IE< the pick is turned almost perpendicular to the strings) and move up toward the base of the neck. If you do this, the strings "soften up" and you can get a nice midrange-heavy chop that really drives. I love playing rhythm on an archtop but I'm still in heavy-duty learning mode and so I try to stick to my GJ when working on technique (which is most of the time :)
    You get one chance to enjoy this day, but if you're doing it right, that's enough.
  • PaganiniPaganini New
    Posts: 74
    Bob,
    I agree, acoustic it's no problem to get the hotclub rythme but I was talking about amplified. The Washburn I have is not loud enough to stand any gypsyjazz guitar
    When we perform on stage we always play amplified and an amplified archtop does not give that short tight gypsyjazz rythme, imo.
  • Bob HoloBob Holo Moderator
    Posts: 1,252
    Yes, amplified it is a different thing altogether.

    I like that late Django electric archtop sound, but it is definitely different than acoustic La Pompe or an amplified acoustic or even a Stimer-Selmac combination.
    You get one chance to enjoy this day, but if you're doing it right, that's enough.
Sign In or Register to comment.
Home  |  Forum  |  Blog  |  Contact  |  206-528-9873
The Premier Gypsy Jazz Marketplace
DjangoBooks.com
USD CAD GBP EUR AUD
USD CAD GBP EUR AUD
Banner Adverts
Sell Your Guitar
© 2024 DjangoBooks.com, all rights reserved worldwide.
Software: Kryptronic eCommerce, Copyright 1999-2024 Kryptronic, Inc. Exec Time: 0.016764 Seconds Memory Usage: 1.00872 Megabytes
Kryptronic