Baro Ferret
![Baro Ferret](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/0/05/Baro_Ferret_%28right%29_with_Gus_Viseur%2C_still_from_1960s_film_clip.jpg/150px-Baro_Ferret_%28right%29_with_Gus_Viseur%2C_still_from_1960s_film_clip.jpg)
Baro retired as a full-time musician during World War II and devoted himself to running bars and to black market businesses during the German occupation of Paris, an activity he continued into the early 1970s.
As a composer, Baro's "valses bebop" were years ahead of the times. His works such as "Panique...!," "La Folle" ("The Madwoman"), "Swing Valse" (written with Belgian-French button accordionist Gus Viseur), and "Le Depart de Zorro" were modernistic, surreal, and dark, part Musette, part modern jazz.
His nephews, Jean "Matelo" Ferret's sons Boulou and Elios Ferré continue to perform gypsy jazz. Provided by Wikipedia