Back To Back (Duke Ellington And Johnny Hodges Play The Blues) - Duke Ellington, Johnny Hodges
Back To Back (Duke Elling...
Duke Ellington, Johnny Hodges
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Back To Back (Duke Ellington And Johnny Hodges Play The Blues)
Duke Ellington, Johnny Hodges
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She Loves You/All My Loving/Eleanor Rigby - Duke Ellington
She Loves You/All My Lovi...
Duke Ellington
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She Loves You/All My Loving/Eleanor Rigby Medley/Live On The Ed Sullivan Show, March 1, 1970
Duke Ellington
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The Duke Ellington Carnegie Hall Concerts, January 1943 - Duke Ellington
The Duke Ellington Carneg...
Duke Ellington
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The Duke Ellington Carnegie Hall Concerts, January 1943
Duke Ellington
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Do Nothing Till You Hear From Me - Ella Fitzgerald, Duke Ellington
Do Nothing Till You Hear...
Ella Fitzgerald, Duke Ellington
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Do Nothing Till You Hear From Me Live On The Ed Sullivan Show, March 7, 1965
Ella Fitzgerald, Duke Ellington
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It Don't Mean A Thing (If It Ain't Got That Swing) - Ella Fitzgerald, Duke Ellington
It Don't Mean A Thing (If...
Ella Fitzgerald, Duke Ellington
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It Don't Mean A Thing (If It Ain't Got That Swing) Live On The Ed Sullivan Show, March 7,1965
Ella Fitzgerald, Duke Ellington
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Money Jungle - Duke Ellington
Money Jungle Blue Note Ton...
Duke Ellington
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Money Jungle Blue Note Tone Poet Series
Duke Ellington
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The Best Of Early Ellington - Duke Ellington
The Best Of Early Ellingt...
Duke Ellington
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The Best Of Early Ellington Reissue
Duke Ellington
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Duke Ellington's Finest Hour - Duke Ellington
Duke Ellington's Finest H...
Duke Ellington
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Duke Ellington's Finest Hour Reissue
Duke Ellington
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The Ella Fitzgerald & Duke Ellington Cote D'Azur Concerts On Verve - Ella Fitzgerald, Duke Ellington
The Ella Fitzgerald & Duk...
Ella Fitzgerald, Duke Ellington
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The Ella Fitzgerald & Duke Ellington Cote D'Azur Concerts On Verve Reissue
Ella Fitzgerald, Duke Ellington
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Live At The Whitney - Duke Ellington
Live At The Whitney Reissu...
Duke Ellington
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Live At The Whitney Reissue
Duke Ellington
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Early Ellington: The Complete Brunswick And Vocalion Recordings 1926-1931 - Duke Ellington
Early Ellington: The Comp...
Duke Ellington
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Early Ellington: The Complete Brunswick And Vocalion Recordings 1926-1931
Duke Ellington
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Jazz Collection: Live! At The Newport Jazz Festival '59 - Duke Ellington
Jazz Collection: Live! At...
Duke Ellington
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Jazz Collection: Live! At The Newport Jazz Festival '59
Duke Ellington
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Meets Coleman Hawkins / And John Coltrane - Duke Ellington
Meets Coleman Hawkins / A...
Duke Ellington
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Meets Coleman Hawkins / And John Coltrane
Duke Ellington
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In The Uncommon Market - Duke Ellington
In The Uncommon Market
Duke Ellington
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In The Uncommon Market
Duke Ellington
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The Duke Ellington Carnegie Hall Concerts, December 1944 - Duke Ellington
The Duke Ellington Carneg...
Duke Ellington
eAlbum Audio
 
The Duke Ellington Carnegie Hall Concerts, December 1944
Duke Ellington
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Carnegie Hall Concert, December 1947 - Duke Ellington
Carnegie Hall Concert, De...
Duke Ellington
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Carnegie Hall Concert, December 1947
Duke Ellington
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Duke Ellington And His Orchestra Featuring Paul Gonsalves - Duke Ellington, Paul Gonsalves
Duke Ellington And His Or...
Duke Ellington, Paul Gonsalves
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Duke Ellington And His Orchestra Featuring Paul Gonsalves Remastered
Duke Ellington, Paul Gonsalves
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Jazz Profile: Duke Ellington - Duke Ellington
Jazz Profile: Duke Elling...
Duke Ellington
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Jazz Profile: Duke Ellington
Duke Ellington
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70th Birthday Concert - Duke Ellington
70th Birthday Concert
Duke Ellington
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70th Birthday Concert
Duke Ellington
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The Best Of Duke Ellington - Duke Ellington
The Best Of Duke Ellingto...
Duke Ellington
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The Best Of Duke Ellington
Duke Ellington
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BIOGRAFIA
The achievements of Duke Ellington (1899-1974) are staggering. The pianist led the greatest of all jazz orchestras, in the opinion of many, without a break for half a century. Its ranks were filled with world-class soloists. Many graduated to successful careers of their own, while others remained for decades. And Ellington composed with his musicians in mind, tailoring some 1,500 short and long works to fit their individual musical personalities. He financed the orchestra though royalties from his recordings and compositions, as well as from box-office receipts, in order to afford himself the luxury of being able to hear his music performed almost from the moment of its conception.

“Other leaders,” Ellington biographer Stanley Dance once noted, “went looking for men who fitted a common predetermined pattern, which was why so many big bands tended to sound the same except when their stars were soloing. Ellington constantly sought out musicians who could give his imagination something new to work on and who also made his band sound different from any other.”

Edward Kennedy Ellington was born and raised in Washington, DC, and studied piano as a child, though he didn’t take it too seriously at first, preferring to play baseball. He wrote his first composition, “Soda Fountain Rag,” at age 15 and was soon playing piano at parties. “I learned that when you were playing piano,” he recalled years later, “there was always a pretty girl standing down at the bass clef end of the piano. I ain’t been no athlete since.”

By 1923, the always-suave pianist was playing New York City clubs with a band called the Washingtonians that included saxophonist Otto Hardwick and drummer Sonny Greer. Ellington became leader the following year, and the band’s unique style began to evolve, especially after growl trumpet specialist Bubber Miley joined in 1925. Under the guidance of manager Irving Mills, the band began recording prolifically in 1927 and was engaged for a four-year residency at the Cotton Club in Harlem, where Ellington provided music for the ever-changing floor shows.

The orchestra continued to flower on records, in motion pictures, and on tours to Europe and throughout the U.S. during the 1930s and reached what many feel was its creative pinnacle between 1939 and ’42, when tenor saxophonist Ben Webster and bassist Jimmie Blanton were both members. In 1941, with financial backing from friends in the film industry, Ellington composed the stage musical Jump for Joy in an attempt to counter the negative images of African-Americans that prevailed in both musical theater and motion pictures. Although it closed after a 12-week run in Los Angeles, Jump for Joy marked he beginning of an interest in creating extended works, many with socially significant themes, that was unabated for the rest of Ellington’s life.

Baritone saxophonist Harry Carney stayed with Ellington longer than any sideman, from 1927 until ’74. Alto saxophonist Johnny Hodges, the band’s most popular soloist, spent almost as long in the reed section, from 1928 to ’51 and again from 1955 to ’70. Among numerous other members of note were trumpeters Bubber Miley, Cootie Williams, Ray Nance, Cat Anderson, and Clark Terry; cornetist Rex Stewart; trombonists Joe Nanton, Juan Tizol, and Lawrence Brown; clarinetists Barney Bigard and Jimmy Hamilton; saxophonists Ben Webster and Paul Gonsalves; bassists Wellman Braud, Jimmy Blanton, and Oscar Pettiford; drummers Sonny Greer, Louie Bellson, and Sam Woodyard; and vocalists Ivie Anderson and Al Hibbler.

The most enduring songs written by Ellington include “Black and Tan Fantasy,” “Mood Indigo,” “It Don’t Mean a Thing (If It Ain’t Got That Swing),” “Sophisticated Lady,” “Solitude,” “In a Sentimental Mood,” “I Got It Bad (And That Ain’t Good),” “Do Nothin’ Till You Hear from Me” (aka “Concerto for Cootie”), “Don’t Get Around Much Anymore” (aka “Never No Lament”), “I’m Beginning to See the Light,” and “Satin Doll.” Among his extended works are Black, Brown, and Beige; The Liberian Suite, Such Sweet Thunder, The Far East Suite, The Latin American Suite, The Afro-Eurasian Eclipse, and three sacred concerts. Ellington’s theme song, “Take the ‘A’ Train,” was composed by his longtime associate, pianist Billy Strayhorn.