Matelo Ferret

Matelo Ferret
Background information
Born
Jean Pierre Ferret

1918
Died24 January 1989(1989-01-24) (aged 70–71)
GenresRomani music, musette, gypsy jazz
OccupationsMusician, composer
Years active1930s–1980s
Preview warning: Page using Template:Infobox musical artist with deprecated parameter "associated_acts". It should be removed.

Jean Pierre "Matelo" Ferret (1918 – 24 January 1989) (also spelled Matelot, Matlo and Matlow, surname also later spelled Ferré on occasion) was a French musette and gypsy jazz guitarist and composer. He was an associate of Django Reinhardt and the youngest brother of guitarists Baro and Sarane Ferret. He recorded with his own sextet in Paris in the 1940s and continued performing there, with occasional recording sessions, until his death in 1989. He was noted for a musical style that incorporated Russian and Hungarian influences and lived long enough to see a resurgence of interest in gypsy jazz in which he was recognised as one of the great surviving players of the genre. Two of his sons, Boulou and Elios Ferré, continue to play a more modern and individualistic form of gypsy jazz-based guitar music in Paris.