Listen to the full 2003 Hot Club Sandwich album: Digga Digga Do
Now streaming on all major services like Pandora (link here) and Spotify (link here)
After twenty years, the False Valse is finally available on all streaming platforms. Head over to Pandora (click here) or Spotify (click here) and give the False Valse a spin. The first track on Digga Digga Do (2003), False Valse was composed by Greg Ruby in the back of Vince Brown’s Volkswagen van while on tour near Eugene, Oregon.
False Valse explores the addition and subtraction of a single beat, oscillating between 5/4 and 3/4 time. The song, in a sense, represented the ‘signature sound’ of the band at the time – keeping one foot in tradition and one foot stretching for continuous experimentation and self-discovery. The melody starts low and sings high with Tim Wetmiller’s violin and Ruby’s guitar matched in tandem, then harmonizing as the False Valse enters 3/4 waltz time. Matt Sircely’s mandolin tremolo flows into Ruby’s punctuated guitar solo, he builds to a powerful chord melody before an outro of contrapuntal whole tones. This photo of the original lineup was snapped at the 4th Ave Tavern in downtown Olympia. The cover art was painted by Tracy Bigelow Grisman. See more of Tracy’s work here: acousticdisc.com/posters
After twenty years, “Brazil” is finally available on all streaming platforms, the second digital release from our 2003 record Digga Digga Do. Head over to Pandora (click here) or Spotify (click here) and give “Brazil” a spin.
After hearing the theme song to the Terry Gilliam film “Brazil,” our bassist James Schneider brought it to the band and it instantly became one of our favorites. Our friend Juan Carlos Serbulo Sosa sang the lyrics. With influences from Django, Les Paul and Jacob do Bandolim, we added our own personal pastiche to the song. Listen on Pandora or Spotify (click here)
“HCS Strut” is now streaming. Check it out at Pandora or Spotify
“Tain’t No Use,” our fourth archival release, is now live on all the streaming platforms.
Check it out on Pandora (link) or Spotify (link) and give it a spin.
“Tain’t No Use” features the vocals of Rich Sikorski and a guitar contribution from founding member Vince Brown. We first heard this song on Stuff Smith and his Onyx Boys (Onyx Club 1936-1939). Naturally, we shaped the arrangement in our own way: Greg Ruby’s guitar introduction of a few, sweet melodic bars leads into Sikorski’s vocals, his velvet croon eases into the plaintive tune with delicate turns of phrase. The archtop guitar of Vince Brown responds to the vocal, leading up to his own solo. Matt Sircely’s lyrical mandolin improvisation references the melody with a bluesy bend. And from the first note, upright bass is at the center of the sound. James Schneider drops into a bass solo right before Sikorski sings the final refrain.
Chances are you have seen us perform this legendary melody if you have been to any of our concerts in the past 20 years: ‘Two Guitars’ is now streaming, the third release from our 2003 record Digga Digga Do.
Listen to La Valse de L’Amoureaux by founding member Kevin Connor
Now streaming on all major services like Pandora (link here) and Spotify (link here)
Kevin composed a special waltz for friends’ wedding about twenty years ago, and Hot Club Sandwich played it for the first time at the wedding that same day. Its title basically translating to ‘Lovers’ Waltz’, Kevin cites the French valse musette tradition as his primary inspiration, especially the powerful and ornate playing of the Ferret brothers, friends and contemporaries of Django.
From the opening melody, Kevin’s fingers fly across the fretboard with attack and sustain, flowing into moments of sweetness as the bridge moves to a bright major key. Matt Sircely’s mandolin follows with warmth and depth of tone, Tim Wetmiller sails through the bridge with harmonized doublestops on violin. We’ve performed this song so many times over the years and we are thrilled that it’s finally streaming everywhere.
Listen to Desde Que Viniste by founding member Matt Sircely
Now streaming on all major services like Pandora (link here) and Spotify (link here)
The eighth release from our archive is “Desde Que Viniste”, a romantic bolero composed by our mandolinist, Matt Sircely. In 2001, our violinist Tim Wetmiller invited Matt to join him and his teacher at the time, Paul Anastasio, to study with their maestro, the legendary Juan Reynoso Portillo and his longtime friend and guitarist Cástulo Benítez de la Paz in Mexico’s Tierra Caliente de Balsas. Cástulo procured a guitar off the wall of an auto repair shop, and they spent weeks singing songs and playing tunes whenever they weren’t busy studying at the maestro’s house. Each day, locals would stop by to share songs, especially romantic boleros. Matt composed ‘Desde Que Viniste’ upon returning north, drawing on the bolero romantico tradition with flowery poetry, both direct and metaphorical. The narrator addresses a lover and friend, expressing love, gratitude, and solidarity from afar in the weathering of coming storms.
Tune in and listen to Karmen by founding member Vince Brown
Now streaming on all major services like Pandora (link here) and Spotify (link here)
The seventh release from our 2003 album ‘Digga Digga Do’ is ‘Karmen’ composed by founding member Vince Brown, now streaming everywhere. Vince explains how: “Karmen is based on ‘L’amour est un oiseau rebelle’, also known as ‘The Habanera’, which is the aria Carmen sings when she first appears in Georges Bizet’s opera of the same name.” Drawing upon the melody’s chromatic movements in the impassioned opening lines, Vince then applied a snappy tempo and we gave it our own creative treatment just like we’d been doing with the Django tunes in our repertoire.
The title track from our 2003 album ‘Digga Digga Do’ is now streaming. Tune in and listen on Pandora (link here) or Spotify (link here) .