Wednesday, June 24, 2026

Tchavolo Schmitt ‎• Miri Familia

 

 



Review by Rick Anderson
Ever since the early years of the Quintet of the Hot Club of France and its leader, the trailblazing Gypsy guitarist Django Reinhardt, Gypsy (or manouche) jazz combos have been characterized by a number of idiosyncratic factors: no drums, multiple guitars (all acoustic), and arrangements that combine a powerfully swinging rhythm with the dark modalities of traditional Gypsy melodies along with jazz standards. The Alsatian guitarist Tchavolo Schmitt takes some of those characteristics to something of an extreme on this album, which features a sextet comprised of five guitars and a bass. Since the other guitarists all play rhythm, this leads to a curiously flat musical texture and a rather one-dimensional sound (the slightly ramshackle production quality doesn't help much in that regard). But it also means that Schmitt has an absolutely rock-solid rhythmic foundation with which to work, and it serves him very well on material like the original blues composition "Jean-Paul Blues" and a particularly energetic and tuneful rendition of "After You've Gone." "Jersey Bounce" starts off with a promisingly jaunty strut, but bogs down a bit toward the end. The title track is a lovely ballad, also composed by Schmitt, and it is perhaps the finest demonstration of his musical maturity, a quality that permits him to take as much pleasure in long, nicely shaped melodic lines as in the virtuosic stunt-guitar pyrotechnics for which the genre is best known. Fans of Gypsy jazz will love this album, but newcomers may want to start with something a bit more varied in texture.
https://www.allmusic.com/album/miri-familia-mw0000802350

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Reseña de Rick Anderson
Desde los primeros años del Quinteto del Hot Club de Francia y su líder, el pionero guitarrista gitano Django Reinhardt, los combos de jazz gitano (o manouche) se han caracterizado por una serie de factores idiosincrásicos: sin batería, con múltiples guitarras (todas acústicas) y con arreglos que combinan un ritmo poderosamente oscilante con las modalidades oscuras de las melodías tradicionales gitanas junto con los estándares de jazz. El guitarrista alsaciano Tchavolo Schmitt lleva algunas de esas características a un extremo en este álbum, que cuenta con un sexteto formado por cinco guitarras y un bajo. Dado que los demás guitarristas tocan todos el ritmo, esto da lugar a una textura musical curiosamente plana y a un sonido más bien unidimensional (la calidad de la producción, ligeramente destartalada, no ayuda mucho en este sentido). Pero también significa que Schmitt tiene una base rítmica absolutamente sólida con la que trabajar, y le sirve muy bien en material como la composición original de blues "Jean-Paul Blues" y una interpretación particularmente enérgica y afinada de "After You've Gone". "Jersey Bounce" comienza con un prometedor y alegre puntal, pero se atasca un poco hacia el final. La canción que da título al disco es una hermosa balada, también compuesta por Schmitt, y es quizás la mejor demostración de su madurez musical, una cualidad que le permite disfrutar tanto de las líneas melódicas largas y bien formadas como de la pirotecnia virtuosa de la guitarra por la que el género es más conocido. A los fans del jazz gitano les encantará este álbum, pero los recién llegados quizá quieran empezar con algo más variado en cuanto a textura.
https://www.allmusic.com/album/miri-familia-mw0000802350



Fay Hallam • Lost In Sound

 



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Gadjo Dilo • Manouche De Grec

 


gadjodilo.gr ...


Gadjo Dilo • Manouche De Grec Vol II

 



gadjodilo.gr ...


Howlin' Wolf • His Best

 



Review by Cub Koda
With the exception of a vinyl compilation issued in the early '80s (His Greatest Sides, Vol. 1), there'd never really ever been a single-disc Howlin' Wolf best-of package available. That all changed with this entry in MCA/Chess' 50th Anniversary series, a 20-track retrospective that serves as the perfect introduction to the man and his music, some of the very best the blues has to offer. While some naysayers will always decry the exclusion -- or inclusion -- of any given number of tracks on any artist's best-of compilation, it's pretty hard to fault what's been collected here. Starting with the two-sided smash that brought him from Memphis to Chicago ("Moanin' at Midnight" b/w "How Many More Years"), this compilation hits all the high points and essential tracks, illustrating how his music developed into the mid-'60s. Eleven of the 20 tunes on here are either written or co-written by Willie Dixon, and Wolf's original takes on "Back Door Man," "Spoonful," "The Red Rooster," "Wang Dang Doodle," and "I Ain't Superstitious" are truly the definitive ones, a place where personality and material symbiotically become as one. Even if you have already have this material, die-hard Wolf fans -- and audiophiles in particular -- will want to investigate this package as the master transfers used here are absolutely stunning, with stereo mixes of "Killing Floor," "Built for Comfort," "Hidden Charms" (with the full-length Hubert Sumlin guitar solo), "Shake for Me," and the long version of "Going Down Slow" being particular standouts. This is a set so essential that it should be on everyone's Top Ten first purchases in building the perfect blues collection. While Wolf's music will take you to many places (both musically and spiritually), here's where you start to absorb it all. [His Best contains the same tracks as the 2007 Geffen release The Definitive Collection].
 
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Review by Cub Koda
With the exception of a vinyl compilation issued in the early '80s (His Greatest Sides, Vol. 1), there'd never really ever been a single-disc Howlin' Wolf best-of package available. That all changed with this entry in MCA/Chess' 50th Anniversary series, a 20-track retrospective that serves as the perfect introduction to the man and his music, some of the very best the blues has to offer. While some naysayers will always decry the exclusion -- or inclusion -- of any given number of tracks on any artist's best-of compilation, it's pretty hard to fault what's been collected here. Starting with the two-sided smash that brought him from Memphis to Chicago ("Moanin' at Midnight" b/w "How Many More Years"), this compilation hits all the high points and essential tracks, illustrating how his music developed into the mid-'60s. Eleven of the 20 tunes on here are either written or co-written by Willie Dixon, and Wolf's original takes on "Back Door Man," "Spoonful," "The Red Rooster," "Wang Dang Doodle," and "I Ain't Superstitious" are truly the definitive ones, a place where personality and material symbiotically become as one. Even if you have already have this material, die-hard Wolf fans -- and audiophiles in particular -- will want to investigate this package as the master transfers used here are absolutely stunning, with stereo mixes of "Killing Floor," "Built for Comfort," "Hidden Charms" (with the full-length Hubert Sumlin guitar solo), "Shake for Me," and the long version of "Going Down Slow" being particular standouts. This is a set so essential that it should be on everyone's Top Ten first purchases in building the perfect blues collection. While Wolf's music will take you to many places (both musically and spiritually), here's where you start to absorb it all. [His Best contains the same tracks as the 2007 Geffen release The Definitive Collection].