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nightandthecity

Practically Family
Messages
904
Location
1938
This thread started with a small Django clip....at some stage I posted the full performance....and now, at last, Django's biographer Michael Dregni has YouTubed the full film short from which it comes. It was apparently made by British impressario Lew Grade as a promo for a Quintette UK tour in 1938 or 39.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RTuhRFLSoao

The other guitarists are Django's brother Joseph and the ridiculously handsome "baro" Ferret...the bass player I'm not sure of. And if you think Baro looks like a gangster that's because he was.
 

Prairie Dog

A-List Customer
Messages
338
Location
Gallup, NM
I've recently purchased two Canadian jazz CD's-
jazz musician Tony Quarrington's 'One Bright Day'
Tony_Quarrington_One_Bright.jpg


and jazz vocalist Sara Latendresse self-titled first outing.
sara.jpg


I heard them both at a jazz club in Vegas and was very impressed with their work and abilities as jazz artists.

Latendresse is a very smooth and sultry singer. Her version of the Bill Withers/Grover Washington Jr. classic, 'Just The Two Of Us' won me over immediatley.
Quarrington's music is very light and breezy. Perfect music to relax to.
 
Thank you!

Great referral. First exposed this hot dance band to by Joe Monte's "Don't Wake Me, Let Me Dream" radio show (BTW, what business did Minnesota Public Radio have hijacking that Pasadena college station, nixing Joe as well as the widely loved "Santo Show!", giving us endless re-runs of Lake Wobegon instead? Diversity my fat behind. Shame on KCSN Northridge for axing Joe as well in their cultural revolution. Heard they had to refund listener sponsor's donations after that one).

Got to see the Duke once; he changed his tuxedo three times! Elegant.
Some of the the boorish audience booed when an excellent male vocalist sang - Hey, Ivy Anderson just wasn't available!

Ivy_Anderson.jpg

Thomas G said:
Hi All,

My first post on this site, so apologies if this link has already been listed, but all fans of Jack Hylton should check out this site: http://www.petefaint.co.uk/jackhylton/music.htm

As well as providing background information on Jack Hylton, it has lots of RealAudio files of his songs, including many with great vocalists such as Sam Browne and Pat O'Malley. Perfect accompaniments to a cold cocktail on a Friday night!
 

Rundquist

A-List Customer
Messages
431
DOUGLAS said:
Any one into Cal Tjader? I've been listening to some of his Sixties work with Jonny Palmieri and Stan Getz. We was definitely very cool.

His collaboration was actually with Eddie Palmieri. Both records (El Sonido Nuevo & Bamboleate) are superb.

John in Covina said:
****
I have several Tjader CD's and his version of "Gimme Shelter" is superb. Don't forget a young percussionist got his start with Cal, that young man was Pancho Sanchez.

Tjader's greatest rhythm section (and band, come to think of it), had Mongo Santamaria on congas, Willie Bobo on timbales, Al Mckibbon on bass, and Vince Guaraldi on piano. The general consensus is that Bobo & Santamaria made the greatest latin jazz dynamic duo of a percussion section ever. They came directly from Tito Puente’s band. The sides that they cut with Tjader are generally considered to be his finest. Cheers
 
nightandthecity said:
This thread started with a small Django clip....at some stage I posted the full performance....and now, at last, Django's biographer Michael Dregni has YouTubed the full film short from which it comes. It was apparently made by British impressario Lew Grade as a promo for a Quintette UK tour in 1938 or 39.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RTuhRFLSoao

The other guitarists are Django's brother Joseph and the ridiculously handsome "baro" Ferret...the bass player I'm not sure of. And if you think Baro looks like a gangster that's because he was.

It's rare for a thread outside the OB to have such a theme as this running throughout and we keep circling back to it . . . I'm so glad this's finally been uploaded to YouTube.

Pierre Ferré (Pierre Baro Ferret) as he appears on this here pic (my apologies for the ridiculous name of the issuing company here . . . truly the terrible side of the 30s/40s), was apparently Django's equal in guitar improvisation . . . I'm on the cusp of buying a couple of CDs to make some kind of judgement along these lines.

jungle1.jpg


Thanks again to natc for bringing this full circle.

Is this sufficient dénoument? Should the thread end where it started.

bk
 
nightandthecity said:
The other guitarists are Django's brother Joseph and the ridiculously handsome "baro" Ferret...the bass player I'm not sure of. And if you think Baro looks like a gangster that's because he was.

p.s. the bassist is almost certainly Tony Rovira. It's not Louis Vola (the guy in the video has too much hair!), and Rovira was the next most common bassist around the time this was made (looks like the mid-late 30s band).

On the making of the film, one wonders. Baro Ferret did not go on the '38 English tour (the other guitarists were Joseph R. and Ninine Vées)

bk
 

Alan Eardley

One Too Many
Messages
1,500
Location
Midlands, UK
Baron Kurtz said:
p.s. the bassist is almost certainly Tony Rovira. It's not Louis Vola (the guy in the video has too much hair!), and Rovira was the next most common bassist around the time this was made (looks like the mid-late 30s band).

On the making of the film, one wonders. Baro Ferret did not go on the '38 English tour (the other guitarists were Joseph R. and Ninine V?©es)

bk

Baron,

I believe you are correct. I think it is Rovira.

Alan
 

pgoat

One Too Many
Messages
1,872
Location
New York City
great thread! There's TOO Much good stuff on FL!

I could probably eat up a lot of server space echoing a lot of favorites already listed; I'll say my special faves are Django, John McGlaughlin, Johnny Smith and Charlie Christian (as I play gtr), but also Lester Young, Miles and Monk.

If you are in the Bay area, be on the lookout for a guitarist named John Klopotowski. He probably doesn't gig that much these days, but worth a google or scan of local clubs. If he's playing, go - you're in for a treat.
 

cowboy76

Suspended
Messages
394
Location
Pennsylvania, circa 1940

Sefton

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,132
Location
Somewhere among the owls in Maryland
In heavy rotation for me this week: Charlie Parker A Studio Chronicle 1940-1948 from a great UK record company JSP. Also listening to Modern Art by the Art Pepper Quartet which is vol 2 of his recordings from the late '50's on Aladdin Records. Haven't been able to find vol 1 yet, though.

Other recent plays have been Coleman Hawkins,Benny Carter,Stan Getz with the Oscar Peterson Trio,Bobby Keys (well,Bobby Keys isn't jazz per se-the Stones house sax man-but a fine player. Nothing like a brass section to give a little class to a bunch of scruffy rock 'n rollers!;) ).

Long live the thread!
 

pgoat

One Too Many
Messages
1,872
Location
New York City
yeah, two rather sad stories but two very amazing musicians. Morgan also struck me as a very intelligent and decent guy in the interviews I've seen.

There was a documentary profile on Pepper that came out some time back, around the time he passed away (late 1980s?). I'd like to see that again.
 

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