Django Reinhardt
JazzGypsy Jazz1930s–1950s

Django Reinhardt£500 · Sweet Spot Rig

Selmer Maccaferri-style acoustic guitar with a metal resonator plate, played through no amplification or a small acoustic amplifier. The tone is percussive, bright and cutting — the Selmer sound comes from the resonator plate and the oval or D-hole sound hole design. Django's right-hand technique uses a rest stroke for the definitive sharp attack.

Total: ~£2891 piece

Signal Chain

Full signal path

GuitarGitane DG-255

£500 · Sweet Spot — Complete Rig

Estimated total~£289

Getting the Sound Right

  • Rest stroke technique: the pick follows through and rests on the next string after plucking. This produces the sharp, percussive attack characteristic of Gypsy jazz
  • A very heavy pick (1.5mm or thicker) is used — the thick pick and rest stroke combine for the snappy attack
  • Two-finger fretting: Django used only his first finger and third finger (his second and fourth fingers were paralysed). Practise with only these two fingers to understand how his vocabulary was shaped by this constraint
  • The Gypsy jazz rhythm ("la pompe") is a specific staccato rhythm pattern — downstroke on beat 1 followed by a silent muted upstroke on the "and," then a chord stab on beats 2 and 4
  • Sweep arpeggios are fundamental — Django's fast arpeggios use economy picking (sweeping in one direction) across multiple strings
  • Chromatic passing notes between chord tones — minor second approach notes before landing on a chord tone produce the bebop-flavoured chromatic runs
  • The Selmer guitar sound is specific and distinct from a standard acoustic — for recordings, use an archtop acoustic or semi-hollow rather than a flat-top folk guitar
  • Vibrato along the string (lengthwise) rather than across — Django's vibrato is a back-and-forth along the length of the string, producing a more subtle pitch variation

Common Mistakes When Chasing This Tone

  • Using high-gain distortion — hollowbody guitars are designed for clean and light-drive use. High gain causes uncontrollable acoustic resonance that the pickup amplifies as noise.
  • Using the amp's volume at less than 4 — boutique clean amps are designed to be played at certain output levels. At very low volumes the tone is compressed and flat compared to full-level operation.
  • Expecting a clean tone to cover all playing dynamics — clean tone requires picking technique to do all the work. Lazy picking dynamics become very audible on a clean signal.
  • Keeping the tone knob at 10 — full treble on a jazz guitar gives a nasal, honky quality that sounds nothing like the warm round jazz ideal.
  • Using round-wound strings — they are brighter, last longer, and have more sustain, but they also sound more "electric" and less woody than flat-wounds for jazz.

Django Reinhardt's Sound

Selmer Maccaferri-style acoustic guitar with a metal resonator plate, played through no amplification or a small acoustic amplifier. The tone is percussive, bright and cutting — the Selmer sound comes from the resonator plate and the oval or D-hole sound hole design. Django's right-hand technique uses a rest stroke for the definitive sharp attack.