Grazie Dario. I will be circulating this to my jam group, who are good, sociable players and fun to be with. We also have a system that one person is the tune leader, who holds the conch, and will make decisiions on tempo, intros and outros. Others can suggest, but it saves time if one person listens to them, and then says "I think we should do it this way".
Ciao Dario... I have a great video where you got rule #8 happened to you at a jam in Northampton back in 2013... I'm sure you remember. And that is a great rule because it also happened to me in my early years learning gypsys jazz. It was a bad feeling, especially when the person does it because I wasn't as experienced at the time as I am today! Thanks for sharing this video.
Good points! I think it would be interesting if more musicians learned to dance. Then dancing would be another option if too many people want to participate in a jam session. Also, the interaction between dancers and musicians often create great results for the music being played. It swings harder and the musicians can relax, knowing that the dancers are having a good time regardless of a wrong note here or there, which opens up creativity. After all, swing music and swing dancing evolved together. They are two interrelated parts of a whole.
@@DarioNapoliGuitar Good! Dancers love to dance to live music. It brings a whole other dimension to the experience. The remark about musicians being more relaxed is of course related to amateur players, not professionals.
@RobertMatichak Minor Swing, Coquette, I'll See You In My Dreams, Blues Mineur, Anniversary Song, Dinette, What Is This Thing Called Love, Nuages, Sweet Georgia Brown, Swing Gitane, Caravan, Django's Tiger, Lulu Swing, Danse Norvegienne, Manoir Des Mes Reves, Tears, All Of Me, Troublant Bolero, What Is This Thing Called Love, Djangology, There Will Never Be Another You
New to gypsy jazz guitar? Start here: bit.ly/4eYDT7M
yeah - fantastic guideline and advice !!👍
@67er_matze97 much appreciated!😊🙏
In all the GJ videos I’ve watched online, I’ve never seen the subject of jam etiquette covered off before. Well worth remembering! Thanks.
@MartinLawson ah, thank you Martin, means a lot!🙏😊
Grazie Dario. I will be circulating this to my jam group, who are good, sociable players and fun to be with. We also have a system that one person is the tune leader, who holds the conch, and will make decisiions on tempo, intros and outros. Others can suggest, but it saves time if one person listens to them, and then says "I think we should do it this way".
@@dingoswamphead ah wow, super cool, flattered!🙏yes, "democracies" and music don't work so well in my experience 😁
Ciao Dario... I have a great video where you got rule #8 happened to you at a jam in Northampton back in 2013... I'm sure you remember. And that is a great rule because it also happened to me in my early years learning gypsys jazz. It was a bad feeling, especially when the person does it because I wasn't as experienced at the time as I am today! Thanks for sharing this video.
@claudelandry7952 ha, yes..much appreciated my friend, thanks for tuning in!🎶🙏😊
Good points! I think it would be interesting if more musicians learned to dance. Then dancing would be another option if too many people want to participate in a jam session. Also, the interaction between dancers and musicians often create great results for the music being played. It swings harder and the musicians can relax, knowing that the dancers are having a good time regardless of a wrong note here or there, which opens up creativity. After all, swing music and swing dancing evolved together. They are two interrelated parts of a whole.
@matsossung8849 ha, I just played a few nights ago for some dancers for the first time, great experience actually!
@@DarioNapoliGuitar Good! Dancers love to dance to live music. It brings a whole other dimension to the experience. The remark about musicians being more relaxed is of course related to amateur players, not professionals.
Great advice. We needed a video like this.
@@21Million much appreciated Jon🙏😊
Yo Dario 🎉🎉
@@DenisChangMusic ciao Denis! When are you coming to Forbach?:)
Grazie maestro, contenuti bellissimi ❤ avanti tutta 😊
@@enricopaparozzi6844 grazie di cuore carissimo!😊🙏💚
C'est un bon résumé pour bien respecter ces concepts. Moi, je dois travailler mes accompagnement en restant plus Light. Merci Dario.
@@renemoretti1553 super! Merci, on va faire ca dans quelque jour😊🎶
@darionapoliguitar
Great advice!
How about a list of 20 songs you feel are most likely to be called in a jam?
Thanks for the video.
@RobertMatichak much appreciated Robert! It depends on the style, do you mean jazz, gypsy jazz, blues?
Gypsy Jazz
@RobertMatichak Minor Swing, Coquette, I'll See You In My Dreams, Blues Mineur, Anniversary Song, Dinette, What Is This Thing Called Love, Nuages, Sweet Georgia Brown, Swing Gitane, Caravan, Django's Tiger, Lulu Swing, Danse Norvegienne, Manoir Des Mes Reves, Tears, All Of Me, Troublant Bolero, What Is This Thing Called Love, Djangology, There Will Never Be Another You
@@DarioNapoliGuitar
That’s great!
Thanks!!
@RobertMatichak 🙏😜
Im moving to Paris, do you have any recommendations for where to jam? Thanks!
@oldmaterizz4516 sure, Piano Vache on Monday, Chez Georges on Tuesday, Monk on Wednesday, Apostrophe on Friday😜
@ ajajajaj thank you, keep up the good work
@oldmaterizz4516 thank you, have fun:)
*****
Hey, I gave it 5 stars, not 3
@murrayatuptown353 Thank you Murray!🙏😊