Django — 1966
Thus, Django 1966 was a specter haunting the fretboards of London and San Francisco. Let us now conjure the impossible: a recording session, December 1966, in Paris. A cold studio. Amps are valve-driven. Reverb springs. No digital anything.
Django 1966 is not a real album, nor a tour. It is a thought experiment. A counterfactual history. It asks: Part I: The State of Jazz Guitar in 1966 To understand Django 1966, we must understand the chasm between his world and the mid-sixties. django 1966
was only eight years old in 1966, a Romani child in Alsace. He would become the great torchbearer of Django's fire in the 1980s. But in 1966, the seeds were being planted: the Reinhardt tradition was preserved in family camps, passed down hand to hand, string to string. Thus, Django 1966 was a specter haunting the
Django 1966: The ghost who swung a psychedelic century. Amps are valve-driven
It is simply Django — in the year the world forgot him, but needed him most. No recording of Django Reinhardt exists from 1966 because he died in 1953. But the music that carried his DNA — from Babik Reinhardt to Jeff Beck to Biréli Lagrène to the millions of guitarists who still practice his solos — proves that Django never truly left. He just changed frequencies.