Gypsy News

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Friday, June 27, 2008

John Jorgenson plays Gypsy jazz in Truro

By Melora B. North

TRURO -

Back in the ’30s, French Sinto Gypsy jazz guitarist Django Reinhardt made music that would change the course of history. Brought up in Gypsy encampments around Paris, he intertwined the cultures of his environment to create a musical genre reminiscent of a dance on the strings with heated abandon.

The sounds are light and frothy, deep and throaty, a contradiction that perfectly melds together to move the spirit and ignite a passion for a romp on the guitar a la Roma music. It is the flight of Reinhardt’s pick that has captured the heart of guitarist John Jorgenson, who will be performing a concert of American Gypsy jazz with his quintet at the Payomet Performing Arts Center, Highlands Center, Truro, for Gypsy Weekend.

The concert is at 8 p.m. Saturday, June 28. Admission is $20-$25. Call (508) 487-5400 for tickets.

A native of Southern California, Jorgenson got his degree in woodwinds from University of Redlands, a liberal arts college in his hometown which he says was small, “only about 35,000 people, a good place to grow up.”

It was as a child that he learned to play piano and dabbled in clarinet, but it was at age 12 that he got his first guitar, and that was just the beginning. Today Jorgenson says he can play several instruments, but the public will get to see him shine on the clarinet and guitar this time around.

“I can play about 10 instruments, though my levels of proficiency differ,” he says with a laugh. “I don’t have the sports gene. When the other kids were out playing sports I guess I was practicing. I used to ski but that ended when I broke my shoulder three weeks before my first tour with Elton John. We had to cut a guitar part.” But that didn’t end things for Jorgenson with the famed singer-pianist; it was actually the start of something quite good.

“I was originally signed up to tour with Elton John for 18 months. It turned out to be six years,” says Jorgenson. “He first heard me when I was playing with the Desert Rose Band, a band I co-founded with Chris Hillman from the Byrds. Six years later he asked me to tour with him. He’s fantastic, funny, very smart and very respectful of other musicians. It was a good job.” And it opened a lot of doors.

Through John, Jorgenson got to meet the late opera singer Luciano Pavarotti.

“They were doing a duet,” says Jorgenson. “It was the coolest thing being backstage in Italy when he came backstage and all of a sudden you heard this voice. Elton was teaching him a song!”

Over the course of his career, Jorgenson has performed with other notables such as K.D. Lang, Roy Orbison, Barbra Streisand, Bonnie Raitt, Earl Scruggs and Benny Goodman, an eclectic assortment of talent to be sure. He has collaborated with Billy Joel and Sting, and three times he has won the American Country Music award for Guitarist of the Year. He even has a Grammy with Peter Frampton. But it is his affinity for Reinhardt that seems to keep coming to the forefront.

“Django is the godfather of my style,” says Jorgenson, who was asked to re-create Reinhardt’s music for film. He did the music for “Gattica” and “Head in the Clouds.” In fact, he played Reinhardt in “Clouds,” which starred Charlize Theron and Penelope Cruz.

“They asked me to re-create a couple of pieces from an old score,” says Jorgenson. “The director wanted to show the guitarist on stage. They cut my hair and dyed it black. I had a mustache and they did make-up on my hands to make them look burned and scarred.” (At age 18 Reinhardt was rescued from a terrible fire that ravaged the caravan he was living in at the time with his first wife. He would later learn to play guitar with just two fingers despite the doctor’s declaration that he would never play again.) “I played with my two fingers. The film is a period piece, great fun. I did my best.” And his best was convincing.

“I’m Scandinavian, Scotch and Irish,” says the blonde with a laugh. “They did such a good job on the make-up, my wife Dixie [Gamble] didn’t even recognize me.”

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