Tag: DjangoFest Northwest

  • The Hot Club of Troy Opens DjangoFest Northwest 2015 on Wednesday, Sept. 23

    The Hot Club of Troy Opens DjangoFest Northwest 2015 on Wednesday, Sept. 23

    BY RUSSELL CLEPPER
    Whidbey Life Magazine Contributor
    September 16, 2015

    Whidbey Island’s gypsy jazz ensemble, the Hot Club of Troy, has a few subtexts to their mission statement. First subtext; “No amps? No problem!” Second: Gypzy jazz all year long. Third: Coffeehouses make great music venues.

    As for their mission statement itself, just three words, one for each subtext; Django, Django, Django.

    Hot Club of Troy in front of the DJangoFest mural at WICA (photo by David Welton)
    Hot Club of Troy (Troy Chapman, Kristi O’Donnell and Keith Bowers (l to r)) play in front of the DJangoFest mural at WICA (photo by David Welton)

    Working exclusively with Django Reinhardt’s body of work, the trio strives to present his music with the purest expression possible, eschewing any amplification except a single microphone placed in front of them as they perform. Although band leader and guitarist Troy Chapman, guitarist Keith Bowers and bassist Kristi O’Donnell each have long resumés in music-making, the Hot Club of Troy is just one year old. However, this nearly nascent act will open this year’s prestigious DjangoFest Northwest at WICA in Langley at 8 p.m. on Wednesday, Sept. 23.  Lance Cercel and the Roma String Ensemble will also perform that night. The headliner for this year’s festival is Bireli Lagrene, the “undisputed top guitarist in the gypsy jazz genre” according to the festival’s website, and according to Chapman and O’Donnell as well.

    Chapman himself is no stranger to the DjangoFest stage. One of North America’s premier interpreters of the genre, the Whidbey Island resident has been a member of the influential Seattle gypsy jazz group Pearl Django since 2010. Along with the Robin Nolan trio, Pearl Django starred in the first DjangoFest Northwest in 2001, and they have appeared every year since that highly successful beginning. On Saturday, Sept. 26, Chapman will perform with Pearl Django once again, sharing the bill that night with the Hot Club of Detroit.

    Hot Club of Troy in an impromptu performance in downtown Langley (photo by David Welton)
    Hot Club of Troy in an impromptu performance in downtown Langley (photo by David Welton)

    The Hot Club of Troy’s debut at DjangoFest caps a year of advanced musical exploration of Reinhardt’s music by the group. “One thing we do is play not only strictly gypsy jazz, but we only do Django’s compositions. He wrote 84 songs and some of them are rarely heard,” said Chapman. “We want to do stuff that people haven’t heard, to dig deeper into his repertoire and learn about his influences. We don’t want to present great guitar playing so much as his songs as great compositions.”

    Of course, Chapman and Bowers are highly regarded guitar players and their shows certainly feature expert picking. O’Donnell explained the group has labored to meld Bower’s chordal style of playing with Chapman’s straight ahead approach as they have explored ways of performing Reinhardt’s music. “We work at weaving the two styles together,” she said. “We’ve worked really hard to make that happen,” Chapman added. “You have to learn first how Django did it, then you can put your own style in it.”

    Another reason they formed a gypsy jazz trio was to create opportunities to play that style all year long, not just during the time of DjangoFest. Their home base venue has been Useless Bay Coffee Company (UBCC), which is where the three musicians first jammed together on Tuesday nights for awhile. That collaboration resulted in the formation of one of Whidbey Island’s finest bands, Trio Nouveau, whose repertoire is mined from the swinging jazz of the Great American Songbook.

    “When we’re playing there, we joke that we’re fueled by UBCC coffee,” said O’Donnell. “Lots of eighth notes!”

    Hot Troy_0156
    Even the local canines appreciate the outdoor concerts and smooth sounds (photo by David Welton)

    UBCC owner and head roaster Des Rock has been a stedfast supporter of the group, as well as of local live music in general. “He told us that ‘the quality of the atmosphere goes up every time you play!” said O’Donnell. We’re really lucky to have Des. He rocks!”

    The popular Langley hangout is the only coffee house on the island currently offering a steady program of live music. Historically, coffee houses have often provided a place for musicians to perform in public and sometimes become important incubators of musical talent and generators of vibrant musical “scenes,” such as one that is happening right now in Paris. In fact, a coffee house in Montreal was instrumental in the musical path of a young Troy Chapman where he spent countless hours at a place called the Yellow Door, one of the longest-lived contemporary live music venues in North America, and one well known among the folk and singer songwriter crowd on the East Coast.

    His mother worked there in the late 1960s and 70s. “I spent every summer, for years, spending my days there,” he said. “until I began living full time with my mom in ’73,” he said.  “I sat in the Yellow Door after school, day after day, and watched great guitar player after great guitar player and decided that was for me!”

    The label for UBCC's new "Django Blend" was created as a celebration of the Hot Club of Troy's beginnings at the lively local gathering place. It was created by author, artist and gypsy jazz guitarist Irene Ypenburg.
    The label for UBCC’s new “Django Blend” was created as a celebration of the Hot Club of Troy’s beginnings at the lively local gathering place. It was created by author, artist and gypsy jazz guitarist Irene Ypenburg.

    The Yellow Door was the site of his first public performance. “I played ‘Goodbye Porkpie Hat’ with my new Electro Harmonix Small Stone Phaser plugged into the PA. Probably in ’78!”

    If that truly was a hootenanny, Chapman must have caught some of the banjo players off guard with that one. It wouldn’t be the first time he has surprised people.

    For example, The Hot Club of Troy’s association with UBCC has inspired the creation of a special offering for coffee lovers and music fans. “We are going to have a brand of coffee,” said O’Donnell, “the Hot Club of Troy ‘Django Blend,’ roasted by Des, in time for DjangoFest. UBCC will be selling the coffee that week and it will be online, too.”

    That development was not part of their original mission statement, but the organic aspect of the coffee that Rock brews at his establishment does compliment their desire to nix amplification of guitars at the group’s performances. Chapman said, “There’s nothing like the beauty of the un-amplified instrument. There’s a great simplicity when playing with no amps.”

    Troy smiles at the end (photo by David Welton)
    Hot Club of Troy’s bandleader, Troy Chapman, got his inspiration to play guitar from countless hours spent at the famous Montreal coffeehouse, the Yellow Door (photo by David Welton)

    In some music circles that approach would be described as “organic,” meaning natural and unaltered by electronic amplification. Even though the guitar itself is a mechanical sound wave amplifier, the sound it produces is the result of the type and quality of the wood, the kind of strings, the skill of the luthier, and the expertise and soul of the musician. Any kind of electric amplification alters that “natural” sound. Even though the altered sound may be pleasing to the ear, it’s not the same as the un-amplified sound of a guitar.

    Chapman has played plenty of loud music throughout his long career in music, but to get at the heart of Django Reinhardt’s sound he and his bandmates are taking this organic path to get there. Their show at DjangoFest will provide an excellent opportunity for local gypsy jazz addicts and music lovers to hear the Hot Club of Troy fulfilling their mission.

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    Django’s Hand
    ________________________________

    Langley resident Drew Christie has created an animated short film for DjangoFest Northwest. Christie’s work has appeared or been featured in numerous publications including the Atlantic and the New York Times. Hot Club of Troy’s bandleader Troy Chapman performs the soundtrack for the short which is titled “Django’s Hand” and tells the story of how Django Reinhardt turned a terrible injury sustained in a fire into the creation of a new style of guitar playing.

    To see the 68 second-long film, visit this link on the DjangoFest Northwest website: http://www.djangofestnw.com.

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    Russell Clepper is a singer-songwriter who plies his trade locally and around the country. He is also a substitute teacher for the Oak Harbor School District.

    Please check the following links for more information about the Hot Club of Troy and/or DjangoFest Northwest 2015:

    http://www.kristio.com/the-hot-club-of-troy.html
    http://djangofest.com/home/djangofest-northwest-2015/

    And soon-to-be up online:
    www.TheHotClubofTroy.com

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  • Fishtank Ensemble rocks DjangoFest NW

    Fishtank Ensemble rocks DjangoFest NW

    BY PATRICIA DUFF
    Whidbey Life Magazine editor
    Sept. 21, 2013

    I stayed out way too late last night at DjangoFest in Langley, because every performance is followed by a party and a “djam” somewhere around town, and at which the Django players always show up and play. So it’s hard to leave.

    The thing about DjangoFest is that, even if you don’t know gypsy jazz music, you can be certain that all the musicians who are ever invited to perform there are going to be highly skilled in a blow-your-socks-off vein.

    At Friday night’s opening show on the old middle school auditorium stage, the Fishtank Ensemble left me sockless.

    fishtank-ensemble-hires2 (500x500)
    Fishtank Ensemble of Los Angleles, Calif. (Photo courtesy of Fishtank Ensemble website)

    This Los Angeles band, led by Ursula Knudson on vocals, saw and violin, with Fabrice Martinez on violin/violintromba, Douglas “Douje” Smolens on guitar, and Djordje Stijepovic on bass, is so versatile in its musicianship, that it’s hard not to sit there with your mouth open from the sheer musical athleticism it takes to do what these people do on stage.

    Knudson uses her voice in ways that echo the whistling beauty of her mad skills on the saw, hitting notes on the scale that seem humanly impossible to reach. Whether she’s singing with castanets in hand, playing her violin, dancing, making unbelievably delicate sounds on the saw or pulling out a tiny banjo that looks like a cousin to a ukulele, she is completely captivating. It helps too that she is gorgeous, and last night wore a fantastically cut, green dress. But the main revelation with this artist is that she uses her voice in ways that sets her apart from any other singer. She can conjure an old fashioned feminine quirkiness that makes you think of Betty Boop crossed with a style that recalls the soprano of Leo Delibes’ “Lakme.” But then she also uses these guttural sounds, “Heh, heh, heh… guck, guck, guck,” like a beat-boxer, only better and more old country and you become wowed all over again.

    This band covers a combination of styles, from straight gypsy jazz Roma, or Eastern European folk songs, an old Greek love song; songs that remind you of your grandmother, and lullabies and weddings.  But then they turn it around and sound suddenly like some funky, modern jazz band blended with Bartok, and it’s like nothing else you’ve ever heard.

    Knudson’s got this big bag of tricks from which she just keeps pulling skills and instruments, and your jaw just keeps dropping and your socks just keep coming off. But, it’s not a “trick.”  It’s skill, rhythm, spirit and musicianship. Basically, she’s a vocal and instrumental gymnast who should be in the musical Olympics, and she’s got a band of musical athletes supporting her.

    I also nominate violinist Martinez for the Olympic team.  He did things with his instrument that I’d never seen before; like breaking off a string and making a sound like something rolling down the inside of large sewer pipe, or doing this “dueling” violin and saw thing with Knudson. Besides being innovative with his instruments, Martinez and the rest of the band were so completely in tune with what Knudson was doing, it went beyond natural gifts and practiced skills to the place where they were all so completely in tune with each other − every note, every movement, every call and answer of their instruments was like some great rhythmic dance and the audience just sits there, agape, getting all what makes music so worthwhile.

    Finally, when Knudson introduces the band, all male, and herself, with her “I’m the girl” caveat, it’s the final sweetness, the cherry on top of what was a delicious, sweet and hugely satisfying hot fudge sundae of a concert.

    John Jorgenson Quintet followed Fishtank Ensemble, and although I don’t have time to review that performance here, (Sorry, JJQ) it also blew me away. I could go on and on about the magnitude of excellence that comes to these stages, including Jorgenson’s expert guitar style, and his gracious smile and bows, along with the rest of his exquisite band (Rory Hoffman has uncanny ability to fly on that piano); it was all I needed to be happy.

    My point is, there are still a couple of shows left to see at DjangoFest. And, although I don’t have time before it’s all over to review everything I’ve seen, I want to make the point that the musicianship at these performances makes it entirely worth the ticket.

    WICAMEDIA_DFNW13_FAPYLAFERTIN (367x500)
    Fapy Lafertin of gypsy jazz fame plays DjangoFest tonight at 8 p.m.

    Tonight Fapy Lapertin performs with Tcha Limberger, Dave Kelbie, Simon Planting and Ryan Hoffman. Lapertin is probably the greatest of all the celebrated gypsy guitarists of today and the nearest thing to Django Reinhardt’s playing you can hear.

    If you love music ─ any kind of music ─ don’t miss DjangoFest.

    Here’s the schedule:

    Saturday, Sept. 21

    3 pm | LMS | $35 | $45 | $55

    The New Hot Club of America with Gonzalo Bergara

    Trio Dinicu with Tommy Davy

    Saturday, Sept. 21

    8 pm | LMS | $50 | $60 | $70

    Headliner Fapy Lafertin with Tcha Limberger, Dave Kelbie, Simon Planting and Ryan Hoffman.

    Sunday, Sept. 22

    6 pm | LMS | $45 | $55 | $65

    Djammin’ in Djangley with Fapy Lafertin, Tcha Limberger, Dave Kelbie, Simon Planting, Jason Anick and featuring Olli Soikkeli with surprise guests! 3 Cent Stamp.

    Get TICKETS here. Visit the WICA’s website for more.