Review: The Hot Club of San Francisco's Bohemian Maestro

Azica (2009)
By JEFF TAMARKIN  |  January 20, 2009
3.0 3.0 Stars

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No genre is as closely associated with a single artist as Gypsy jazz is with Django Reinhardt. The Belgian guitarist has been dead for 55 years, but a cottage industry has long thrived on his inventions, and the Hot Club of San Francisco (named after Reinhardt's Quintette du Hot Club de France) have now been at it for 20 years, not only renewing Reinhardt's compositions but channeling his essence into everything else they address. Bohemian Maestro takes a somewhat different, more ambitious tack.

In addition to a handful of impeccably realized, reinvigorated Django covers and two opening originals in the standard Gypsy jazz (a/k/a Gypsy swing) milieu, the Hot Club set out to explore the area of early-20th-century French classical music as Reinhardt might have heard it. Claude Debussy's Clair de lune and Francis Poulenc's Les chemins de l'amour are sweet, airy ballads that place violinist Evan Price at the forefront, and a few of Reinhardt's pieces, notably the 6:30 "Messe/Improvisation," are given a near solemn, chamber-like treatment. And just for the hell of it, they toss in Jelly Roll Morton's "The Pearls."

Reinhardt may or may not have heard Morton's music, but the Hot Club's take, which moves lead guitarist Paul Mehling over to the banjo, injects a bit of levity into an album that's otherwise the most serious they've recorded.

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