{"type":"rich","version":"1.0","title":"Tim Kliphuis &#38; Paulus Schafer Trio Rock Django","author_name":"DjangoBooks.com","author_url":"https:\/\/www.djangobooks.com","cache_age":"86400","thumbnail_url":"https:\/\/www.djangobooks.com\/media\/ecom\/prodlg\/tim-kliphuis-paulus-schafer-rock-django.jpg","thumbnail_width":400,"thumbnail_height":400,"html":"<div class=\"koembedwrap\"><p><a href=\"https:\/\/www.djangobooks.com\/Item\/tim-kliphuis-paulus-schafer-rock-django\"><img src=\"https:\/\/www.djangobooks.com\/media\/ecom\/prodlg\/tim-kliphuis-paulus-schafer-rock-django.jpg\" alt=\"Tim Kliphuis &#38; Paulus Schafer Trio Rock Django\" class=\"koembedimg\" \/><\/a><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"koembedtitle\"><strong>Tim Kliphuis &#38; Paulus Schafer Trio Rock Django<\/strong>      <\/p>\r\n<p class=\"koembeddesc\">What if Django Reinhardt had lived on into the sixties and seventies would he have become involved with Rock music himself? Or would he, like he did in the thirties and forties, have taken the famous songs of the day and turned them into his trademark Gypsy Swing Europe&#34;s biggest contribution to jazz to date? Just imagine Django sitting in with the Allman Brothers, Deep Purple, Average White Band, Fleetwood Mac, Stones and Kinks. Picture him swapping solos with Rod Argent, Hank Marvin, Eric C...<\/p><\/div>","width":400,"height":900}