How To Play Gypsy Jazz Guitar in The Style of Django Reinhardt

The Complete Gypsy Jazz Arpeggio Video Course

 

While transcribing and playing Django Reinhardt’s solos, I noticed he repeats the same shapes and musical ideas again and again. I wondered how he managed to use the same idea yet always sounds so fresh, vivid and new? I never noticed that he repeats himself in any way until I actually played his solos.

The answer is that Django Reinhardt used his musical ideas in a slightly different way each time. The inner rhythm of his phrasing is always changing.

The place in the bar in which he starts each phrase is different every time. He creates melodies that you can always sing because he follows his musical taste and not his fingers.

In this lesson, you will learn a few of Django’s improvisational ideas. Play the example phrases, try to understand them and practice until you can use each concept in a variety of ways.

That way you’ll get Django’s ideas and spirit into your own guitar improvisation. You will learn something far better than a few licks – ideas you can use to create interesting, fresh and new solos yourself.

 

Click HERE to improve your gypsy jazz solos with Yaakov’s 5-hour video course!

 

Django Reinhardt

Django Reinhardt

Gypsy jazz guitarist Django Reinhardt was the first famous European jazz musician. Born in Belgium and raised in a gypsy camp near Paris, he first learned to play the violin, but later switched to banjo-guitar. At the age of 12, Django Reinhardt played good enough to play professionally.

In 1928 disaster struck and the 3rd and 4th fingers of his left hand got mutilated in a caravan fire, but Django developed a new fingering system and by 1930 he was playing again in Paris’ cafes.  In Montmartre; he heard records of American jazz players like Duke Ellington and Louis Armstrong and he absorbed their music.

In 1934 he met Stephane Grappelli, a violin player with whom he founded Quintette du Hot Club de France. Nuages and Minor Swing are some famous Django Reinhardt compositions.  Django Reinhardt became the icon of gypsy jazz guitar.

 

Lesson Video

How to Play Gypsy Jazz Solos in the Style of Django Reinhardt

 

Idea 1 – Approaching The Target Note

When you want to play over a chord, you can use its arpeggio, but how can you create a new musical sentence each time from the same arpeggio?

For Django, the answer was simple: you can create a new phrase just by the way you approach one of the notes of the arpeggio and then play the rest of the notes straight.

 

[2:12 in the video] In the following phrase Django uses an enclosure (half-tone before the chord tone and diatonic note above the chord tone) to the note A (the 5th degree of Dm) and then a simple Dm6 arpeggio.

 

Django Reinhardt tabs 1

 

[5:20 in the video] In the next phrase, you have almost the same idea. Here the chords move from E7 to Am. On the first bar of Am, Django plays two eighths and a quarter instead of a quarter and two eighths.

You see that you can use the same idea again and again with tiny changes and still sound interesting. This is much better practice than learning a lick and “copy-pasting” it.

 

Django Reinhardt tabs 2

 

[9:30 in the video] In this third phrase, I play the exact same idea over Dm but the enclosure is played from the beginning of the bar and Django reaches the target note D at the 2& beat. The idea is the same though, an enclosure of a target note and the simple triad played after that.

 

Django Reinhardt tabs 3

 

[11:12 in the video] In the next example, we have simple enclosures of the 5th and 1st degrees, preceding by an octave jump which Django played very often.

Notice how interesting it is when Django starts this whole idea in the preceding bar, on E7. He anticipates the Am chord.

Try to implement this and improvise with this idea in different places in the bar.

 

Django Reinhardt tabs 4

 

In the next phrase, the same thing happens over Am. The Am arpeggio starts on the 1+ beat just after the enclosure.

 

Django Reinhardt tabs 5

 

In this phrase, Django plays a Dm6 arpeggio, just after the enclosure that appears on the previous bar, anticipating our target note.

 

Django Reinhardt tabs 6

 

Idea 2 – Diminished 7 Over Dominant Chords

The dim7 chord is a symmetric chord, with 3 half-tones between each one of its notes.

If you play a diminished chord on the 3rd, 5th, b7 or b9 degrees of the dominant 7 chord, you get the 7b9 sound.

Django used this substitution a lot, and again, each time in a different way.

 

For example: on an E7 chord you can play the arpeggios of G#dim7, Bdim7, Ddim7, and Fdim7:

 

G#dim7 G# B D F
Played over E7 3 5 b7 b9

 

Bdim7 B D F Ab (=G#)
Played over E7 5 b7 b9 3

 

Ddim7 D F Ab (=G#) Cb (=B)
Played over E7 b7 b9 3 5

 

Fdim7 F Ab (=G#) Cb (=B) Ebb (=D)
Played over E7 b9 3 5 b7

 

This is how the G#dim7 arpeggio looks on the fretboard:

 

G# diminished arpeggio diagram

 

Here are some examples from Django’s Minor Swing solo:

 

Django Reinhardt tabs 7

 

In the next few licks, pay attention to your pick movement. It will give you a glimpse into the Gypsy rest-stroke picking method (click here for an in-depth lesson about rest-stroke picking).

 

[13:44 in the video] There are three important movements: downstroke, sweep, and upstroke:

  • The downstroke Downstroke symbol: use your elbow to move between strings. It’s like each string has a different elbow position. When you play the down-stroke, you should come to rest on the string below. For example – if you hit your 6th string, you should “lean” on your 5th string with your plectrum. This downstroke is very important and every first note on each string should be played as a downstroke.
  • The upstroke Upstroke symbol: use your wrist. Imagine you have a card inside your hand that you want to quickly glance at and then immediately hide again. The upstroke is fast and short – a flick of the wrist.
  • The Sweep Sweep symbol: when you play a down-stroke and then a note on the string below, you need to continue with the same movement from your elbow to the higher string. For example: if you play a downstroke on your 6th string and then move on to the 5th string, you just have to push your hand further down from your elbow.

 

Here is a common gypsy jazz phrase with the dim7 arpeggio:

 

Django Reinhardt tabs 8

 

The Chromatic Scale [12:35 in the lesson video at the top]

The chromatic scale is one of Django Reinhardt’s trademarks. It is also a good technical exercise for mastering rest-stroke picking.

Django uses this scale in various ways – you can hear a complete long ascending run in his solos over Nuages and Montaigne Sainte Geneviève. Or you can hear the descending scale in the middle of Minor Swing and Dinah.

He would play this scale in sixteenth notes and in triplets, short or long, starting on a different beat inside the bar each time.

Hot Club de Norvege - Montagne Sainte Genevieve (Django's Waltz)

 

[15:08 in the lesson video at the top] Here are the tabs for the chromatic scale:

 

Chromatic scale tabs

 

The “rule of gypsy jazz picking” says that you need to start each new string with a downstroke.

That means that sometimes we need to play two downstrokes in a row. In the descending chromatic scale, for example, we finish the first string with a downstroke and then we start the second string with a downstroke.

 

[14:24 in the lesson video at the top] To avoid that, modern Gypsy jazz players play the fake chromatic scale – which uses only 4 notes per string to keep the alternate picking going all the time:

 

Fake chromatic Scale tabs

 

[16:09 in the lesson video at the top] In the following lick, Django uses the descending chromatic scale with a triad at the end:

 

Django Reinhardt chromatic lick

 

Toward the end of Django’s solo over Minor Swing, Django uses the descending chromatic scale, combined with a diminished arpeggio, enclosures, and an Am arpeggio:

 

Django Reinhardt chromatic lick 2

 

Idea 4 – Double Enclosure

[17:35 in the lesson video at the top] This idea is taken from Django’s solo over Django’s Tiger.

Use a pair of notes each time:

  • The lower note: play a half-tone approach below the chord note.
  • The upper note: play a note which is one tone above the chord note.

 

[19:00 in the lesson video at the top] Here’s an example over the C major chord:

 

Django Reinhardt double enclosure tabs

 

Click HERE to improve your gypsy jazz solos by mastering all the arpeggio shapes you need!

 

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3 thoughts on “How To Play Gypsy Jazz Guitar in The Style of Django Reinhardt”

  1. Steve Kaiser

    This is one of the best lessons that I have ever seen in over 40 years of guitar playing. You are a great teacher.

  2. Lou De Fusco

    I had the pleasure of meeting this genius also heard him with Duke at Symphony hall around 1953 and he dazzled me on how far ahead he was in this ability. Little is known but he moved into Bebop some of these songs are still available. A memorable experience. Les considered him the greatest ever and paved the way for the guitar being just a comp instrument. I had some pix too but moved 6 times and lost them. His son was a great guitarist too. His rendition of NUAGES he recorded and his dad Looking down from above had to be beaming!!
    Lou De Fusco
    guitarinstituteoflearning. net soon to be 90 and still teaching jazz guitar. I think that Dirk and the gang do a fantastic job in keeping Jazz guitar alive.

    1. Dirk Laukens

      Nice, Lou, must have been quite an experience!

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