Total Guitar

THE TOP 10 Jazz Fusion PLAYERS

These jazz pioneers and fusion virtuosos are essential listening

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01 DJANGO REINHARDT Few have been as influentia­l as the Belgian‑born gypsy jazz pioneer

Countless players of all styles have cited Django as an influence, from Wes Montgomery and Joe Pass to Stevie Ray Vaughan and Jeff Beck, though it’s among the Gypsy communitie­s of Europe that Django truly lives on. Exactly how he managed, with a badly injured fretting-hand, to play such incredible lead lines is still the subject of debate. Frankly, it’s mind-boggling - and his intensely swinging singlestri­ng solos, near impossible chromatic runs encompassi­ng the entire range of the guitar neck, incredible arpeggio leaps across the fretboard and fearsome rhythmic drive have had musicians’ jaws on the floor ever since. Mere hyperbole? Certainly not! Together with violinist Stéphane Grappelli, Django was instrument­al in developing the vocabulary of the entire gypsy jazz genre.

Django almost exclusivel­y used a 1930s Selmer-maccaferri guitar, set up with light gauge ‘silk ’n’ steel’ strings (0.010-0.046) and featuring an internal sound chamber to enhance projection. His own Selmer, serial number 503, is on display at the Museum Of Music in Paris. Only a few dozen other examples survive and today fetch astronomic­al sums!

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The master of gypsy jazz himself
Two-fingered lightning The master of gypsy jazz himself

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