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Original Recordings, Vol. 13: 1946-1947 - Jam-A-Ditty
Duke Ellington
európai
első megjelenés éve: 1947
59 perc
(2007)

CD
2.541 Ft 

 

IMPORT!
Kosaramba teszem
1.  Diminuendo In Blue
2.  Magenta Haze
3.  Blue Skies
4.  Sultry Sunset
5.  Happy-Go-Lucky Local
6.  Beautiful Indians, Part 1: Hiawatha
7.  Beautiful Indians, Part 2: Minnehaha
8.  Flippant Flurry
9.  Golden Feather
10.  Tulip Or Turnip
11.  Overture To A Jam Session
12.  It Shouldn't Happen To A Dream
13.  Jam-A-Ditty
14.  Who Struck John?
15.  How High The Moon
16.  Frustration
17.  Blue Lou
18.  Far Away Blues
19.  Park At 106th
Jazz / Classic Jazz; Big Band

Recorded:
* Tracks 1,2: 23 October 1946
* Tracks 3-5: 25 November 1946
* Tracks 6-9: 5 December 1946
* Tracks 10,12: 18 December 1946
* Tracks 11,13: 11 December 1946
* Tracks 14-19: 9 June 1947

Duke Ellington Orchestra
Lawrence Brown; Harry Carney; Kay Davis; Duke Ellington; Jimy Hamilton; Al Hibbler; Johnny Hodges; Taft Jordan; Ray Nance; Al Sears

The accomplishments of Duke Ellington are so remarkable, both in their quality and their quantity, that they put him on his own level. He wrote music constantly for fifty years (thousands of compositions and arrangements), led an orchestra that was constantly at the top of its field, developed his own distinctive piano style, and did all of this while constantly performing, recording, rehearsing and travelling. By 1946 when most of the selections on this collection were recorded, Ellington was 47 and had been leading his orchestra for 21 years, with 28 to go. He was an internationally famous name who was able to persevere despite the end of the swing era and the breakup of the bands of so many of his contemporaries.
During this potentially difficult period, Duke Ellington could rely on the great self-confidence that his mother had instilled in him during his childhood. Born 29 April 1899 in Washington DC, Edward Kennedy Ellington admitted many times that his parents (especially his mother) spoiled him. But unlike many other spoiled kids, Ellington did not spend his life acting as if he expected to have everything done for him. In fact, the upbringing had the opposite effect. He always felt that he should justify the love and affection that his mother felt for him (even after she passed away in the 1930s) and, although he had the knack of looking as if everything was easy and he never worked, in reality he never stopped working and creating.

Known as 'Duke' since his childhood days due to his classy and smooth personality, Ellington was a professional pianist and bandleader (after a brief flirtation with art) since he was a teenager. He was making a good living in Washington DC when he accepted an offer in 1922 to come to New York and join Wilbur Sweatman's band. When that engagement ended, the money soon ran out and he returned home. But the following year he returned and joined Elmer Snowden's Washingtonians. A money dispute in 1924 resulted in Duke becoming the band's new leader. Playing at the Kentucky Club regularly during 1924-27 resulted in the Ellington sound being born, both in his orchestra and in his own playing. After some early primitive recordings, the Duke Ellington Orchestra began to sound like itself in late 1926. With the help of their manager Irving Mills, the group became the house orchestra at the Cotton Club in late 1927 and very soon they became quite famous.
The Duke Ellington Orchestra both predated the Swing era and far outlived it. Ellington had his own niche by 1929 and his ability to write popular songs that became standards, his innovative arrangements, and the many great individualists in his band that he somehow blended together in his ensembles kept Ellington popular throughout the 1930s and '40s. Even though historians tend to rate the 1940-42 Ellington Orchestra as his greatest one, the band that he had during 1946-47 also ranked very high. While most big bands of the period, had at the most, five major soloists (one trumpet, one trombone, two reeds and piano), Duke had ten: trumpeters Taft Jordan, Harold 'Shorty' Baker and Cat Anderson, Ray Nance doubling on trumpet and violin, trombonist Lawrence Brown, clarinettist Jimmy Hamilton, altoist Johnny Hodges, Al Sears on tenor, baritonist Harry Carney and the leader on piano.

The first thirteen selections (which are really fifteen if one counts the extended versions of Happy-Go-Lucky Local and Overture To A Jam Session as two parts apiece) constitute all of Duke Ellington's recordings for the Musicraft label. The swing era may have been ending but there was no reason for the quality of Ellington's band to decline or for him to follow such current musical trends as emphasizing pop vocals or playing bebop.
As if to show off the timelessness of his music, this set begins with a remake of Diminuendo In Blue, an ensemble piece first recorded by Ellington in 1937 and which in 1956 would, along with "Crescendo In Blue" and a 27-chorus "interlude" by tenor-saxophonist Paul Gonsalves, cause a sensation at the Newport Jazz Festival. This version is straightforward and features complex harmonies and riffs that partly disguise the fact that the song is basically a blues. It leaves one wanting more.

Magenta Haze is a ballad beautifully interpreted by Johnny Hodges, whose tone on alto has never been equaled. The great pianist-arranger Mary Lou Williams, who was married to Shorty Baker at the time, wrote a few arrangements for Ellington. Her reworking of Blue Skies as a trumpet battle (subtitled "Trumpets No End") is her most famous work for the band. At first Taft Jordan, Baker, Ray Nance and Cat Anderson solo in that order and then the sequence gets shuffled around, with Anderson responsible for the high-note work. Hodges returns for another lyrical showcase on Sultry Sunset, showing why he was considered the leading altoist in jazz before Charlie Parker.
Duke Ellington was a pioneer in writing and recording extended works. Happy-Go-Lucky Local was originally a two-sided 78 and it is one of many Ellington compositions to depict a train ride. While quite picturesque, with Cat Anderson providing the train whistle, it is of greatest significance for the theme that emerges during its final part, a melody 'borrowed' a few years later by Jimmy Forrest (who played tenor briefly with Ellington) and recorded as "Night Train."

The next four compositions (three by Ellington) are not as well known. The Beautiful Indians Part 1: Hiawatha is actually a thinly-disguised version of "It Don't Mean A Thing If It Ain't Got That Swing", featuring the booting tenor of the underrated Al Sears. Kay Davis' wordless semi-operatic voice is showcased on The Beautiful Indians Part 2: Minnehaha. Billy Strayhorn's Flippant Flurry is a difficult work that is interpreted effortlessly by clarinettist Jimmy Hamilton. Harry Carney, the definitive baritone-saxophonist, shows off his huge sound on the melancholy ballad Golden Feather.
Tulip Or Turnip has one of Ray Nance's most famous vocals and he sounds quite at home on Don George's hip lyrics; the short solos are by Nance and trombonist Lawrence Brown. Overture To A Jam Session is an unusual futuristic piece which has some prominent bass playing from Oscar Pettiford. It Shouldn't Happen To A Dream is one of Al Hibbler's better vocals while Jam-A-Ditty is an exciting number that has Carney, Hamilton and Brown as the key soloists along with a couple of the trumpeters.

The final five selections on this CD are all taken from radio transcriptions recorded 9-10 June 1947. The Duke Ellington Orchestra has essentially the same personnel as earlier although Cat Anderson was temporarily out of the band and trombonist Tyree Glenn had joined to fill the spot formerly occupied by the late Tricky Sam Nanton.
Who Struck John is a brief blues original featuring Johnny Hodges. How High The Moon, a very popular number in 1947, gives Baker and Hamilton some solo space. Frustration puts Carney in the spotlight, the swinging Blue Lou has a colourful spot for Nance and Far Away Blues is a wistful feature for Hodges. Park At 106th serves as a fine closer, featuring Nance, Carney, Pettiford and Duke.
This collection, 'Jam-A-Ditty', features the Duke Ellington Orchestra right in the middle of its 48-year prime.
---Scott Yanow

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