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Ellington,Duke  |  SKU: 9ZOUCK-FZ30-00  |  Barcode: 8437012830868

Ellington,Duke - Festival Session [Vinyl]

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Ellington,Duke - Ellington,Duke - Festival Session [Vinyl]
Barcode: 8437012830868

Personnel: Duke Ellington (arranger, piano); Russell Procope (alto saxophone, clarinet); Johnny Hodges (alto saxophone); Jimmy Hamilton (tenor saxophone, clarinet); Paul Gonsalves (tenor saxophone); Harry Carney (baritone saxophone, bass clarinet); Cat Anderson, Harold "Shorty" Baker, Willie Cook, Andres Merenghito, Ray Nance, Clark Terry (trumpet); Quentin Jackson (trombone, bass); Britt Woodman, John Sanders (trombone); Jimmy Woode, Joe Benjamin (bass); Sam Woodyard, Jimmy Johnson (drums).
Recorded at Columbia's 30th St. Studio, New York, New York on September 8, 1959. Originally released on Columbia (8200).
Duke Ellington was constantly composing new material as well as creating new arrangements of vintage works, as heard on this Columbia LP recorded in 1959. "Perdido" is an extended feature for Clark Terry's virtuoso fl?gelhorn, though this would be his final studio session as a regular member of the Ellington band. "Copout Extension," a longer version of an earlier work called "Copout," showcases marathon soloist Paul Gonsalves on tenor sax. Among the new pieces, the three-part suite "Duael Fuel" features drummers Jimmy Johnson and Sam Woodyard, though the piece was dropped from the band book after 1960. "Idiom '59" is another new three-part suite, with the elegant clarinet of Russell Procope, clarinetist Jimmy Hamilton's more raucous styling, and finally, the leader paired with Terry (again on fl?gelhorn). This suite had an even shorter life; it had been premiered at the Newport Jazz Festival earlier in the year, and this was its second and final performance. Ellington's brisk swinging chart of "Things Ain't What They Used to Be" spotlights the matchless alto saxophonist Johnny Hodges, who was always as ready to play the blues as he was ballads. "Launching Pad," though credited to Ellington, was actually written by Terry and orchestrated by the pianist. This sassy blues strangely features Ray Nance instead of its composer as the trumpet soloist, along with a quartet consisting of Terry, Britt Woodman, Hamilton, and Gonsalves. Highly recommended. ~ Ken Dryden

  • Format: Vinyl
  • Genre: Pop