Showing posts with label swing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label swing. Show all posts

Monday, March 2, 2009

RUFUS REID

Rufus Reid (b. February 10, 1944 in Atlanta, Georgia) is an American jazz bassist, educator, and composer. He lives in Teaneck, New Jersey.

Personal history

Rufus Reid was raised in Sacramento, California where he played the trumpet through junior high and high school. Upon graduation from Sacramento High School, he entered the United States Air Force as a trumpet player. During that period he began to be seriously interested in the bass.

After fulfilling his duties in the military, Rufus had decided he wanted to pursue a career as a professional bassist. He moved to Seattle, Washington, where he began serious study with James Harnett of the Seattle Symphony. He continued his education at Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois, where he studied with Warren Benfield and principal bassist, Joseph Guastefeste, both of the Chicago Symphony. He graduated in 1971 with a Bachelor of Music Degree as a Performance Major on the Double Bass.

Rufus Reid's major professional career began in Chicago and continues since 1976 in New York City. Playing with hundreds of the world's greatest musicians, he is famously the bassist that saxophonist Dexter Gordon chose when he returned to the states from his decade-long exile in France. His colleagues include Thad Jones, Nancy Wilson, Eddie Harris and Bob Berg.

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Biography by Ron Wynn

A prolific bassist who's seemingly always in the recording studio, Rufus Reid's name appears on countless hard bop, bebop, swing, and even some pop sessions. His restrained yet emphatic and pungent tone, time, harmonic sensibility, and discernible, if understated, swing are welcome on any session. Trumpet was Reid's first love, but he switched to bass while in the Air Force. He played with Buddy Montgomery in Sacramento, CA, then studied music in Seattle and Chicago in the late '60s and early '70s. Reid worked in Chicago with Sonny Stitt, James Moody, Milt Jackson, Curtis Fuller, and Dizzy Gillespie, and recorded with Kenny Dorham, Dexter Gordon, Lee Konitz, and Howard McGhee in 1970. He toured internationally several times with the Bobby Hutcherson-Harold Land quintet, Freddie Hubbard, Nancy Wilson, Eddie Harris, and Gordon through the '70s. Reid moved to New York in 1976, playing and recording with a quartet co-led by Thad Jones and Mel Lewis, and taught at William Patterson College in Wayne, NJ, starting in 1979. He recorded with Konitz, Ricky Ford, Jack DeJohnette's Special Edition with Kenny Burrell, with a quintet co-led by Frank Wess and Art Farmer, and in duos with Kenny Burrell and Harold Danko in the '80s. Reid also did sessions with Art Farmer and Jimmy Heath. He has co-led a group with drummer Akira Tana since the late '80s that is called TanaReid. As a leader, Rufus Reid has cut sets for Theresa, Sunnyside, and Concord.

Source: http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=11:hifpxqy5ld0e~T1

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Rufus Reid

Rufus Reid is, without a doubt, one of the most influential bassists working in jazz today, and he has had a significant impact on double bass performance and pedagogy throughout his career. His book The Evolving Bassist was one of the earliest of the contemporary generation of double bass method books, and it continues to be a foundational text for double bass students. I recommend it to all of my students who are interested in jazz, and I use many of his exercises for arco study and sight reading practice even with students who only study classical music.

Born on February 10, 1944 in Atlanta, GA., Rufus Reid was raised in Sacramento, California where he played the trumpet through junior high and high school. Upon graduation from Sacramento High School, he entered the United States Air Force as a trumpet player. During that period he began to be seriously interested in the bass. After fulfilling his duties in the military, Rufus had decided he wanted to pursue a career as a professional bassist. He moved to Seattle, Washington, where he began serious study with James Harnett of the Seattle Symphony. He continued his education at Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois, where he studied with Warren Benfield and principal bassist, Joseph Guastefeste, both of the Chicago Symphony. He graduated in 1971 with a Bachelor of Music Degree as a Performance Major on the Double Bass. The MidAtlantic Arts Foundation awarded Rufus The 2005 Mellon Jazz Living Legacy Award for his dedication to America’s National Cultural Treasure: Jazz, for his personal and professional commitment to Jazz Education in the Mid-Atlantic Region. The International Society of Bassists presented Rufus with their highest honor, The Distinguished Achievement Award, in 2001. The New Jersey Chapter of the IAJE named him OUTSTANDING EDUCATOR of 1999. The International Association of Jazz Educators awarded Rufus the Humanitarian Award in 1997 BASS PLAYER magazine, awarded Rufus the 1998 Jazz Educator Achievement Award.

Source: http://doublebassblog.org/2008/07/cbc-87-rufus-reid-interview.html

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Rufus Reid

Rufus Reid, one of today's premiere bassists on the international jazz scene, with his reputation firmly established in the education arena, now adds composition to his vitae. These past three years, Rufus has been a participant in the BMI Jazz Composer's Workshop which has empowered him to move more deeply into the composing arena. He won the Charlie Parker Jazz Composition Award for his composition, "Skies Over Emilia." His composition, "Whims of the Blue Bird" is the result of this award's commission. This has led to further commissions. He is writing for string orchestra, jazz ensembles large and small, and double bass ensemble pieces. 

Rufus travels throughout the world as guest artist performing his compositons with both small and large ensembles. The BBC Big Band in Great Britain has recorded three of Rufus' compositions, and three arrangements of standards. 

The Gait Keeper is a result of a commission from Cornell University Jazz Ensemble. The title tune of the new Rufus Reid Quintet CD is an adaptation of that big band work. 

The Gait Keeper (Sunnyside Records) contains several new works by Rufus. This Quintet CD features a variety of moods and textures, opening with an infectious bouyant melody, called The Meddler. It also includes a musical tribute to his mentor and friend, the great bassist, Ray Brown. and closes with a majestic bowed solo paying tribute to the great bassist, Sam Jones, with his composition, "Seven Minds." This CD will definitely survive a journey of repeated listenings for the jazz enthusiast. 

Rufus already has two trio CD's out with Sunnyside: Perpetual Stroll, and Seven Minds; Corridor To The Limits, a quartet CD that features Harold Land, plus his duo CD with Harold Danko, called Myrth Song.

From 1990-2001, Rufus co-led a Quintet with Akira Tana. They released five CD's during their tenure: Yours and Mine and Passing Thoughts on Concord Records; Blue Motion ,Looking Forward , and Back To Front are available on Evidence Music. 

Rufus also has four duo CD's. Two in cooperation with Michael Moore, released by Double Time Records: Double Bass Delights and Intimacy of the Bass. Rufus and Ron Jackson did Song for Luis for Mastermix Records, and Peter Ind and Rufus recorded Alone Together for Wave Records. 

Rufus' book, The Evolving Bassist , published since 1974, continues to be recognized as the industry standard as the definitive bass method. As of January, 2000, the book is available in its millennium edition. 

Rufus Reid is equally known as an exceptional educator as well, teaching clinics since 1971, with associations with Jamey Aebersold Summer Jazz Workshops, the Stanford University Jazz Workshop, and the Lake Placid Institute, to name a few. Rufus was on the faculty of William Paterson University in Wayne, New Jersey, as Full Professor and Director of the Jazz Studies and Performance program for twenty years completing his tenure in 1999. The WPU Jazz Program continues to be considered one of the best in the country for the aspiring jazz student. 

Rufus Reid's major professional career began in Chicago and continues since 1976 in New York City. His extensive jazz background and discography reads literally like the Who's Who in jazz. He has traveled, performed and recorded with many of the great Jazz Masters. He was privileged to share many musical moments with some that have passed on: Gene Ammons, Kenny Dorham, Eddie Harris, Sonny Stitt, Don Byas, Philly Joe Jones, Thad Jones, Mel Lewis, Dexter Gordon, Bill Evans, Stan Getz, Dizzy Gillespie, and Art Farmer. 

Rufus has performed and recorded with Andre Previn, Kathleen Battle and the St. Lukes Chamber Orchestra in 1992. Also in 1992, Rufus had two performances of "Two Faces," a Concerto for Solo Double Bass and Jazz Trio, composed by Benny Golson for Rufus with the Wayne Chamber Orchestra. It was debuted at William Paterson University and had a New York premier in October in Alice Tully Hall at Lincoln Center. 

Born on February 10, 1944 in Atlanta, GA, Rufus Reid was raised in Sacramento, California where he played the trumpet through junior high and high school. Upon graduation from Sacramento High School, he entered the United States Air Force as a trumpet player. During that period he began to be seriously interested in the bass. After fulfilling his duties in the military, Rufus had decided he wanted to pursue a career as a professional bassist. He moved to Seattle, Washington, where he began serious study with James Harnett of the Seattle Symphony. He continued his education at Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois, where he studied with Warren Benfield and principal bassist, Joseph Guastefeste, both of the Chicago Symphony. He graduated in 1971 with a Bachelor of Music Degree as a Performance Major on the Double Bass. 

In 1997, The International Association of Jazz Educators awarded Rufus with the Humanitarian Award. BASS PLAYER magazine, awarded Rufus the 1998 Jazz Educator Achievement Award, and DOWN BEAT magazine in March 1999, had a feature story on Rufus Reid as a legendary thirty year veteran. In November 1999, The New Jersey Chapter of the IAJE named him OUTSTANDING EDUCATOR of 1999, Rufus Reid truly continues to be THE EVOLVING BASSIST.

Source: http://www.sonsofsound.com/artists/reid/biography.html

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Discography

As leader

Live at the Kennedy Center (Motéma Music)
The Gait Keeper (Sunnyside Records)
Perpetual Stroll (Sunnyside Records)
Seven Minds (Sunnyside Records)
Corridor To The Limits (Sunnyside Records)
Myrth Song, with Harold Danko
Yours and Mine (Concord Records)
Passing Thoughts (Concord Records)
Blue Motion (Evidence Music)
Looking Forward (Evidence Music)
Back To Front (Evidence Music)
Double Bass Delights, with Michael Moore (Double Time Records)
Intimacy of the Bass, with Michael Moore (Double Time Records)
Song for Luis, with Ron Jackson (Mastermix Records)
Alone Together, with Peter Ind (Wave Records)

As sideman

With Jack DeJohnette
Album Album (1984)

With The Thad Jones/ Mel Lewis Orchestra
It Only Happens Every Time (1977)

With Dexter Gordon
Sophisticated Giant (1977)

Books: The Evolving Bassist(1974) (2nd Edition:ISBN 9780967601502)

Contributions to Education

Jamey Aebersold Summer Jazz Workshops
Stanford Jazz Workshop
The Lake Placid Institute
Professor Emeritus[2], William Paterson University, Jazz Studies and Performance program (1979-1999)
The "Richard Davis Foundation for Young Bassists" Annual Bass Conference
The Sligo Jazz Project

Recognition/Awards

2008 Guggenheim Fellowship, Creative Arts / Music Composition category[3]
Charlie Parker Jazz Composition Award ("Skies Over Emilia")
2006 Fellowship, from the New Jersey State Council on the Arts
The 2005 Mellon Jazz 2005 Living Legacy Award, from The MidAtlantic Arts Foundation
The Distinguished Achievement Award, 2001, The International Society of Bassists
Outstanding Educator of 1999, The New Jersey Chapter of the IAJE
Humanitarian Award, 1997, The International Association for Jazz Education (IAJE)
1998 Jazz Educator Achievement Award, BASS PLAYER magazine
Raymond and Beverly Sackler Composition Competition 2006 Award Winner, administered by the University of Connecticut
2006 ASCAP/IAJE Billy Strayhorn Commission Recipient

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Rufus Reid by Bob Bernotas

Rufus Reid is one of the world's greatest bass players. At least this is what I read in Downbeat about two years after I witnessed him buying his first bass from a friend of ours named Malcolm Groves who was the bass player in our high school jazz band at Sacramento High School. Rufus built his reputation in Chicago, but he went to high school with me and many other fine musicians in Sacramento, California. The bandmaster, Aubrey Penman, was an inspiring figure and great organizer. Rufus was a quiet little cat and played third trumpet. Every now and then he would stand up and take a little solo and us hotshots would turn around and go "yeah!". So the world lost a trumpet player but gained a great bassist and educator. A number of years later, I ran into Rufus at a clinc he was doing at the University of California at Berkeley. He was up there with an afro and speaking eloquently about the bass, jazz and improvising. I walked up to him and congratulated him on finding himself, a truly magnificent event. I used to listen to him a lot with Dexter Gordon at the old Keystone Corner in San Francisco and later with Stan Getz. In the last few years, I had the opportunity to work with him on several fine occasions and he was my bass player of choice for my Benny Carter recording. So it is with great pride and admiration that I present an interview with my good friend and colleague the great Rufus Reid, courtesy of Bob Bernotas, for you to savor. MM

Jazz critics love to call this or that bassist, "the anchor of the band." It's one of their most well-worn, and least apt, cliches. A far more fitting metaphor-still in a nautical vein-would be that the bassist is the rudder of the band. Harmonically, bassists have to navigate through the often dense and deep chord changes, finding the notes that give each chord its character and stringing them together smoothly. Rhythmically, bassists must steer a steady course amidst the unruly eddies and currents of jazz polyrhythms.

So, in brief, the bass player's job is really very simple: just play the right notes in all the right places. Then, after all the other players have had their say, the bassist gets to solo. And nobody does all of these things better than Rufus Reid.

From his days in Chicago during the early 1970s to his current and longtime tenure on the New York scene, Reid has built a reputation as one of the most reliable, respected, and sought-after players in jazz. Clearly, when you've been the bassist of choice for masters like Dexter Gordon, Gene Ammons, James Moody, Kenny Burrell, Art Farmer, and J.J. Johnson, well, you must be doing something right. Alongside his countless sideman gigs, Reid, in partnership with drummer Akira Tana, co-leads the quintet, TanaReid.

And as if all that were not enough to occupy one busy bassist, Reid is a dedicated jazz educator. Since 1980 he has served as director of the Jazz Studies and Performance Program at New Jersey's William Paterson College. He also is an active clinician and private teacher, the author of two books on bass playing, and a former panelist for the National Foundation for the Arts. In recognition of this long record of service, the International Association of Jazz Educators, at it's annual convention in January 1997, honored Reid with its Humanitarian Award. BB

Did you begin on the smaller string instruments, like violin or cello, as many bassists have?
No, I was a trumpet player. I was a brass player, actually, from junior high school-mellophone, euphonium-but only by default, because they ran out of trumpets. But I eventually got the trumpet in high school. And then I was in the Air Force Band as a trumpet player. So on one level I guess you could say I was a "professional" trumpet player, but that's really a misnomer.
I think I always had an affection for the bass, but I didn't really get into it until I got into the military and I had a lot of time to practice and I ended up teaching myself.

So you found your true instrument relatively late.
Yeah, I was between 18 and 19. When I was in a band in high school, whenever we took a break I always went over to the bass player and kind of fooled with the bass a little bit. But I never really thought of it as something I would do, until I was in the military and had a lot of time and there was a bass standing in the corner. That's where I started. 
So I had an affinity for the bass. I was much more comfortable with it. It's funny, I knew less, but I actually could do more on the bass. So it was much more satisfying.

When I quit the trumpet I was actually playing better than I ever did play. I was never a lead player, but I was a good ensemble player. But in retrospect, I wasn't a very good trumpet player at all. Jazz-wise, I was trying to sound like Miles or trying to do some things Louis Armstrong would do, but only because I had a good ear. I had no idea what they were doing until I really began to work with the bass. Then I began to get into chords and understand that stuff.

Did you get to study bass formally in the Air Force?
I was basically working on my own. There were some guys in the military that actually helped me. Even though I was a young player they liked my time-feeling better than the bass player who had the job. 'Course he didn't really care about it anyway. And then I did some studying with a retired Japanese bass player from the Tokyo Symphony when I was in Japan.

But I didn't really study the bass until a couple years after getting into the instrument-I mean seriously. I had gotten hooked, so to speak, and so I said, "Maybe I better get serious, get me a real teacher and buckle down." I lived in Seattle for about three years after I got out of the service because my brother lived there. And so I studied with James Harnett, who was the principle bassist at the Seattle Symphony at the time. So that was really my first real formal study, although it wasn't jazz. It was just learning the instrument and playing orchestral stuff.
So the military was a really wonderful thing for me, whereas it's not a real fond. memorable event in a lot of people's minds. It really helped change my whole life. I met some wonderful people and I had some great experiences.

You began your real professional career in Chicago.
Right. I finally went back to college when I was up in Seattle. I went to Olympic College, which was a two-year community college, and then I moved to Chicago in 1969 and I finished up at Northwestern, which was great because it was a heavy-duty music school. So I really had to bear down. And then in Chicago, I became kind of the house bass player for the Jazz Showcase. I was there about seven and a half years, and five of those years were pretty intense.

Who were some of the people you played with there?
Well, every week there was somebody-Sonny Stitt, Gene Ammons, Kenny Dorham, Booker Ervin, Curtis Fuller. That's where I met Kenny Burrell. That's the first time I got to play with Dexter. Illinois Jacquet, James Moody. Moody and Gene Ammons used to do a lot of sparring together, so did Sonny Stitt and Gene Ammons. And of course, Harold Land and Bobby Hutcherson. Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis, I used to play with him a lot. Zoot Sims, Al Cohn. You know, anybody who came through town. So there was always something for me to get involved with.

And most of the people didn't have a book. They came in and called tunes. Chicago was a "tune town," and if you worked, you had to know a lot of tunes. I wouldn't say that everyone who came in didn't want to rehearse. Harold Land and Bobby Hutcherson came into town demanding a rehearsal and were very particular about what they wanted to hear, and that was really very intriguing to me. And consequently those were the two people that took me to Europe for the first time. The Showcase, that was an education in itself, every week.

I would get records if I didn't really know the person's music, the way that they played, 'cause I would assume if they made this record, this was the way that they played on a gig, which was not necessarily the case. But at least it was a start. And so, in a way I was beginning to get a reputation on people's lips. Chicago was a very, very strategic period for me.

What were some of the skills that you needed to develop in order to cope with that sort of situation?
Well, as a rhythm section player I think part of the job description is really being pliable, being flexible enough to find that sweet spot in a person's rhythm, where they place the beat. And as a bass player it was a challenge. I never really thought about it so much, I just did it because I had to. It was something that made sense to me. I tried to connect with all the people I played with. But it was a real challenge to try to play with everybody.

Were there any particular musicians with whom you worked who were especially challenging?
Well, Harold Land and Bobby Hutcherson really did it harmonically, and they were a lot more modern, let's say, more modal, in what they were doing, especially during that period, although they had this incredible bebop core. But Bobby Hutcherson was doing all these things with Andrew Hill and stuff earlier which harmonically were really open. That was probably the most demanding thing.

I did play with Joe Henderson a little bit at that time, and his music was harder. I mean, it swung and everything, but harmonically it did other things. It was harder. You know, playing the blues with Gene Ammons, I mean, it had a big, fat groove and that was really the most important thing. On Joe's stuff, that was important, too, but harmonically you had to be more on it. So that was challenging for me.

So it seems like versatility is the most important quality for any bassist who wants to work a lot.
I think so. And being able to hear, because a lot of times I came up playing and there were no books, there was no music. And a lot of times I couldn't see the keyboard. They'd ask me if I know the song. I'd say, "No." So they would just start the tune. "Well, I'll play a chorus and you just come in." I had to figure out what key it was in, whether it had a bridge or not, and fumble my way the best way I could. In a way, the first couple choruses might have been pretty chaotic, but at the same time I learned how to really hear changes, and then remember sequences as they go by.

So retaining events that were happening was important for me. And I think most people liked me because I caught on real fast. This musical savvy is unwritten, but it's there, and a lot of young students today really don't understand that. You don't have time to analyze anything, you've just got to go with the flow, 'cause you gotta play! So to me, that has been my survival kit.

My tentacles were always out. Always. I think that a lot people, that they get complacent and they get comfortable and their tentacles kind of recede and sometimes they forget how to get out. And then all of a sudden these people don't have their senses anymore of how to survive. They can't think fast enough. But as bass players we have to think fast, because we have that ability to completely sabotage the band immediately, harmonically, rhythmically, or both.

And It's the bass line, or the attitude of the bass line, I guess, is really what makes a tune work. I think, maybe, a lot of bass players don't give enough consideration to the clarity of their bass lines.

What gives a bass line clarity?
Well, the first thing I tell students is they should always play as if there is no one else in the rhythm section. Assume that there is nobody else to clarify the tune harmonically, meaning a pianist or a guitarist or whatever. They also should assume that there is no drummer, that their time is good enough. So without playing chords, we are able to make the listener hear something that's not completely all there. Just to say, "Well, I just want to walk a bass line," that's a cavalier way to think about it.

One thing about the players who are successful, you know, Ron Carter, Buster Williams, Eddie Gomez, Dave Holland, is the clarity of their playing, and I think my career has been able to benefit from that. I feel I could play it as if no one else was around and someone could transcribe my bass line and say, "This must be this chord." If you can get that clear, then you have arrived, so to speak, at understanding the sounds.

I spend a lot of time talking about making a bass line satisfy me. It can satisfy me academically, it can be "correct," but when I play something and I flinch, that means I didn't like it or I wish I hadn't played it or whatever. There's no "perfect line," right? But it has to be satisfying. So I actually may go from one bar to the next and say, "Well, there's something about that I don't like," even though I know it's correct. It's not wrong. But then I just maybe flip an octave or change a note, and then I say, "Yeah, I'm satisfied there."

As a player, when you begin to improvise you don't have time to analyze stuff. So I advocate that a person really should sit down and write out a lot of lines. Not necessarily transcribing, say, one of Ron Carter's lines, because he did those. Transcribe your own lines and then say, "Why did I do that? I don't like that." Well, why didn't you like it? "I don't really know why. I just didn't like it." So you change it. And if you really are meticulous enough it should take you about a half hour to write out just one chorus, quarter notes, that would be totally satisfying.

I think bass players end up having to be magicians, you know, illusionists, because they end up making people believe they're hearing more than they're hearing, hearing more harmony, hearing implied harmony that isn't really there. And that adds a lot of color.
But that's because, I think, some of the greatest bass players that I've studied, like Ray Brown, he's a good pianist. Red Mitchell was a wonderful pianist. Ray Drummond is a wonderful pianist. People don't hear him play, but he's kind of a frustrated pianist. But that's why when he solos, he comes up with these other notes. And the more I became friendlier with the piano and began to understand the way harmony moves, then my lines were better. My implications were better, more clear. And my soloing was better.

One of the problems we have as bass players is that we're supporting everybody with this bass line, but when it comes to our solo, there's no bass line. So consequently we end up feeling that we have to play a solo which is really more of a glorified bass line. And it ends up not really being as melodic as one might like it to be. Now I'm not saying that I want that support from the pianist, because I don't really want a piano player to walk a bass line while I'm playing, although sometimes, depending on who it is and how well they are able to do it, it may be very nice.

I guess this is why most bass players tend to play in the upper register, because it gets them in the realm of where they feel people will believe that they're soloing, as opposed to being a "bass player." But I tend to still play in the lower registers, even though I could play in the upper register, like an Eddie Gomez or a Niels-Henning ÿrsted-Pedersen or like John Patitucci, now, in particular, or like Michael Moore, who play a great deal in the upper registers of the instrument predominantly. I'm more down in the gut part of the bass.

I suppose your big breakthrough came in 1977 when you joined Dexter Gordon's quartet.
It was an incredible period for me. It's been over 15 years now since I left his group, for sure, and I'm still reaping the benefits of having played with him. As loose as he was, he was still clear when he played. He wasn't, as you know, a real technical, dazzling kind of a player, but he had an incredible sound and he was demanding enough when he played. He had this huge, robust sound and Eddie Gladden had this huge, robust sound on the drums, and George Cables had this huge palette at the keyboard, so I didn't have a choice. And we began to really work very well together. I really felt I was an integral part of that band.

Dexter was great. We got along fine. It was easy to travel with him. He was so laid back all the time but we never missed any airplanes, I don't know why. And he was not a malicious kind of guy. I was always paid, well and on time. And when he played, he played. Forever.
He was an extremely intelligent man. He came from a well-bred family, his father was a doctor. He would read the newspaper every day and he was always on top of current affairs. He had a lot of thoughts about a lot of things. So it was really nice to be around somebody like that.
And it was a strategic time for him, too, kind of a second chance, in a sense, coming back to this country and actually reaping some of the things that he should have had a long time ago. So I had four years of really a great time. We were busy, we were playing a lot and traveling a great deal, and it still has really fond memories.

I eventually left the band because as we became busier, it was more difficult for him to really take care of business sometimes, because of his physical condition. He was still drinking too much and still dealing with some of the drugs, and it just got to be a hassle. I was actually having difficulty dealing with that, so eventually I left before it really got funky, because I loved him so much and I wanted to leave all the good stuff in place.

That was around the time you joined the faculty at William Paterson College. What is your role there?
I am the director of the Jazz Studies and Performance Program at William Paterson. This is my eighteenth year, which is hard to believe. As director of the program I replaced Thad Jones, who was artist-in-residence,when he decided to move to Europe. He was a full-time person, but at that time there was no degree program. So the idea was to create a program that was different from any other program, if that were possible, and have a real connection to the marketplace, because of our logistic set-up to New York, and then set up a curriculum that I felt that was more realistic to the bandstand.

Realistic in what way?
In that, you're not just studying the music, but preparing to be able to hang on the bandstand. In other words, we're really developing the students' ears, instead of giving them a test and then grading them on the test and saying, "OK, you're a good player." We wanted to create an atmosphere so that once they got to the bandstand it wasn't a culture shock. And I felt that from my experience, good, bad, and indifferent, we would be able to show the students what works and what doesn't work.

I learned on the bandstand and you don't have time to analyze, you have to deal. But as students, we feel that we can stop and we can analyze stuff, we can rationalize, or whatever, and that doesn't work in the real world. You don't get a second chance, sometimes, if you can't prove that you actually have some savvy. And so, we have created the environment where the students perform in a couple different groups learning a lot of repertoire, a minimum of 25 tunes for each group with no duplications. So that's 50 tunes, plus their private lessons.
In a nutshell, I helped develop the curriculum that worked-and some of the stuff that didn't work, we tried it again. And yet, what I do best is play. Even with the educational thing, what I do best is to play. So when I teach, I play and I talk about what I'm doing. This is basically why I was hired, because I was able to communicate, and I enjoy that. It has been a challenge, but I get a chance to work with a lot of young players and see them develop. And it's made me into a stronger player.

When students come into the program, what do they need to learn most of all?
Most of them, they want it now, without working for it. A lot of the young students, their priorities are in the wrong places, in my mind. Not everyone, obviously, but there are a lot of students who really want to become famous before they actually know how to play their instruments. This is one thing that Wynton Marsalis has made very evident, being more knowledgeable about a lot of things. On one hand, it's been great. On the other hand, it's made some students put their priorities in a different place because they want a manager and they want a record contract, but they don't have anything to manage yet nor do they have the experience.

In May 1992 you premiered a remarkable piece at William Paterson, a three-movement bass concerto by Benny Golson, Two Faces. Would you like to talk a bit about that?
I hadn't really worked that hard since I left school. It was fantastic for me, first of all, that Benny Golson, of all people, would write something for me. He was asked to do it through the auspices of the school. I had worked with him with the Jazztet and with his quartet and different things, so he said, "Yeah, that sounds great," and we went to work. It was over 700 measures, you know? And it was fantastic. It actually was the greatest thing for me because it made me utilize all the things that I had studied in school, in the orchestral fashion, and yet it also utilized all the things that I do as a jazz player.

When I began to really "go underground," so to speak, working on the concerto, it felt so good. My hands felt good. I wish I could have played it a couple more nights back to back. I really feel that I could play Benny's piece better now, although I still need to go back in the woodshed with it, but it made me realize how much music I didn't know, and how much I wasn't connected with my instrument. I'm constantly thinking about it, 'cause I would like to record that piece. But that was a highlight of my career, to have that, basically, dropped in my lap.

In the last few years you had been working with J.J. Johnson. Has he really retired?
He's serious. Our last concert was at William Paterson, November 10 [1996]. He hates to travel, always has, with a passion. And he feels that he doesn't want to come out and play less than he would like you to hear him. He's been very adamant about that, extremely concerned about not being up. And of course when you hear him, you say, "What are you talking about?"

Well, he's gone out on top, which is rare.
That's what he wants. He said, "There are a lot of my colleagues that ended up not playing as well," I mean really bad, and he says, "I don't want to do that." And he's made enough money, I guess, that he doesn't really have to. I won't say that he won't ever play out again, but he's not going to travel with the band anymore.

What impressed you most about working with J.J.?
Just his focus. And when I worked with J.J., when I worked with Benny Golson, these were incredible gentlemen. Kenny Burrell. They are elder statesmen.

And Art Farmer?
Yes, absolutely. I mean, these are absolute gentlemen, and I think a lot of the young players don't see enough of that kind of person, not only as heavy-duty players, but as people.
One of the first records my brother gave me was Walkin' with Miles and J.J., and I could sing his solos. I was 16. Now, for me to play with him was really fantastic. So I had this vision when I went to the first rehearsal. I had all these expectations and it was even more. It was unbelievable. He was very meticulous. After the rehearsal, I didn't even have to do the gig. The rehearsal was so satisfying and so wonderful.
When we played together that first night people thought we had been together for a long time, because J.J. is so very meticulous. He's a ponderer. He really ponders about how the whole picture looks, not only his part, which he's extremely concerned about, but how it all works. That's why he hates jam sessions. He hates the unknown.

We were on the road, and there was one very good concert, one of the real exceptional ones that I remember, and they were all pretty good. This was outside of Amsterdam and the place was packed and it just went nuts. The next morning, I woke up and there was a note under my door. It was a handwritten note from J.J. saying, "Thank you for last night. You played your butt off." And that really messed me up.

So I had some really wonderful people to learn from in my career. Eddie Harris was my first boss. Everything he said, he did. All he wanted you to do was to be on time and play good. You always got paid on time. So he spoiled me. Nancy Wilson spoiled me. I never had any problems with Dexter. I never had any problems with J.J. They set a precedent for me.

So this is also something that we talk about at the school with the kids. I say, "You don't have to be abused by a lot of people just because you're a musician." I guess it's easier said than done, but I say, "Many of the problems that we as musicians have, we've allowed them to happen." If you look good and you come in on time, you don't have to allow a lot of the crap that we end up having to take, out-of-tune pianos and all that. You have to learn to speak up, but then you also have to back it up. The bottom line is, you have to be able to play, all the time.

I mean, Eddie Harris played good every night. And Gene Ammons and all these people. James Moody, man, you better be in good shape to play with this man. And J.J. was consistent every night. So he demands you to be the same.

You do get the chance, occasionally, to work as a leader, or co-leader, of your own quintet, TanaReid. Why don't you say a few words about that?
Akira and I are in our sixth year collaborating. We're working on some new music for a new album, which we hope will be recorded later this year. So a lot of my energies are really on that band, because I haven't been this happy in a long time, as a leader. Although I'm being hired, now, for who I am, on other people's gigs I still have to play the way that they want me to play. But with this band, I play the way I play, and it's been very gratifying.

Reprinted from Jazz Player Vol.5, No.1

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Saturday, February 21, 2009

BILLY BAUER

Billy Bauer (November 14, 1915 – June 16, 2005) was an American cool jazz guitarist.

Life

Bauer was born in New York City. He played banjo as a child before switching to guitar. He played with the Jerry Wald band and recorded with Carl Hoff and His Orchestra in 1941 before joining Woody Herman in 1944 as a member of the First Herd and in 1946 he played with Benny Goodman and Jack Teagarden.

Working in small groups led by bassist Chubby Jackson and trombonist Bill Harris, Bauer established himself as a soloist in the bebop movement.

In 1946 he began working with Lennie Tristano. Tristano and Bauer enjoyed a natural synergy in their style and approach. Their development of "intuitive music" led to the 1949 session which included the free improvisations "Intuition" and "Digression".

Bauer continued his pioneering guitar work in a partnership with Lee Konitz, whose avant-garde saxophone work was a perfect match for Bauer's guitar. The two musicians' dialogue crossed styles from bop and cool to the avant-garde. Their recordings have been described as "some of the most beautiful duet recordings in jazz". "Duet For Saxophone and Guitar", was an unusual instrument pairing which has been described as redefining the role of jazz guitar.

Bauer made one album under his own name, "The Plectrist" in 1956. The CD reissue has been described as "demand(ing) the attention of anyone even remotely interested in jazz guitar".

Teaching

In later life Bauer taught at the New York Conservatory of Modern Music and his own Billy Bauer Guitar School in Roslyn Heights, New York.  He also published instructional books on studying music and playing the guitar.

Near the end of his career, Bauer appeared at the 1997 JVC Tributes for Barney Kessel and Tal Farlow. Bauer led the way for guitarists like Jimmy Raney and student Joe Satriani.

In 1997 he published his autobiography "Sideman" (with Thea Luba ISBN 13 978-0965723701).

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Billy Bauer (1915 - 2005) was already an established professional guitarist in New York when players like Johnny Smith and Jimmy Raney arrived on the scene. He played with the Jerry Wald band before joining Woody Herman in 1944 as a member of the 1st Herd. And in 1946 he played with Benny Goodman and Jack Teagarden. 

Billy Bauer established and distinguished himself as a solid rhythm player with these bands but it was in the small groups that emerged from these bands, lead by Chubby Jackson, Bill Harris and Lennie Tristano, that Billy Bauer established himself as a significant soloist in the evolving bebop movement. Billy Bauer's solo work with these groups has been sited as some of the best examples of early bebop guitar. But, more significantly, his solo work has been sited as some of the most progressive playing for any era. His work with Lennie Tristano in the mid 1940's certainly represented some of the most progressive guitar playing up to that time. 

The trio and duet recordings Bauer made with Tristano around 1945 are especially interesting. Tristano and Bauer enjoyed a natural synergy in style and approach to their music. Tristano's intricate arrangements were a perfect match for Bauer's guitar. These examples demonstrated that Bauer was not just a good guitarist, but also an outstanding musician. His unison playing with Tristano was precise, and his accompaniment to Tristano's piano represented some of the best and earliest examples of great guitar comping. 

Billy Bauer continued his pioneering guitar work with Lee Konitz in the 1950's and 1960's. As with Lennie Tristano, Bauer found a kindred musical spirit in Konitz. Konitz's avant-garde saxophone work was a perfect match for Bauer's advanced guitar. On the recording Lee Konitz especially, the two musicians demonstrated a unique musical dialogue across a range of styles from bop and cool to the avant-garde. Duet For Saxophone and Guitar, was an unusual instrument paring, that really allowed Bauer’s great musicianship to be heard. Early in 1956, Billy Bauer made a recording under his own name. Plectrist put Bauer front and center throughout, playing great jazz guitar.

In the history of jazz guitar there have been many examples of great musicians who are often overlooked for the enormous influence they had. Billy Bauer is one of these. Anyone interested in the early evolution of the guitar in bop and cool jazz should start with Bill Bauer. He led the way for guitarists like Jimmy Raney, and along with Lennie Tristano, brought the piano, guitar, bass trio to a whole new level.

In the 1990's Billy Bauer appeared at the 1997 JVC Tributes for Barney Kessel and Tal Farlow. Just Jazz Guitar, February 1996 had a nice interview with Billy Bauer by Michael Katz. 

©Copyright 2005 Classic Jazz Guitar

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Biography by Jason Ankeny

Guitarist Billy Bauer was a critical force behind jazz's evolution from swing to bebop, his precise, progressive fretwork foreshadowing the emergence of cool jazz and even the avant-garde. Born in New York City on November 14, 1915, Bauer played banjo as a child but moved to guitar in his late teens, first earning notice behind clarinetist Jerry Wald. In 1941 he made his first recordings with Carl Hoff & His Orchestra -- three years later, Bauer signed on with Woody Herman's First Herd, with whom he cut a series of sessions, followed by stints in support of Benny Goodman and Jack Teagarden. The small groups that emerged from these big bands would prove Bauer's most fertile creative environment, however.

After brief collaborations with Chubby Jackson and Bill Harris, he teamed in 1946 with pianist Lennie Tristano, a three-year partnership that yielded the most inspired and influential work of the guitarist's career. Across a series of duet and trio recordings, Tristano and Bauer proved uniquely complementary musicians, with Bauer's razor-honed guitar navigating Tristano's intricate arrangements with nimble ease. Together, both men were cited as leaders of the growing bop movement, and on recordings like "Intuition" and "Digression," they effectively created free jazz. 

After ending his partnership with Tristano, Bauer found another kindred spirit in alto saxophonist Lee Konitz. Their collaboration reached its creative apex with the 1951 session Duet for Saxophone and Guitar, which expanded upon its unusual instrumental pairing to essentially redefine the role of jazz guitar. By now Bauer was regularly winning awards from the magazines Down Beat and Metronome, but he retained the humility and disdain of the limelight that would ultimately serve to marginalize his contributions to contemporary music -- only in 1956 did he cut Plectrist, the first and last studio recording released under his own name. 

Bauer was instead happiest and most effective as a sideman, working with the likes of Milt Hinton and Pete Candoli. He also served with the NBC Staff Orchestra and taught at the New York Conservatory of Modern Music. During the last three decades of his life Bauer rarely recorded or performed live, instead channeling his energy into the Billy Bauer Guitar School, which he operated from a small office in Roslyn Heights, NY. In 1997 he published his autobiography, Sideman, and continued offering private lessons until just weeks prior to his death from pneumonia on June 17, 2005.

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About Billy Bauer

Born: 11/14/1915, New York

Died: 6/17/2005, Melville New York

Internationally respected Jazz Guitarist. Billy Bauer was a musician, father, husband, publisher and master instructor. 

Billy evolved with the jazz movement of his time -- from swing to be-bop to cool to avante-garde to "free jazz" with outstanding musicianship. Pioneered in taking the guitar out of the purely rhythmic to an  intricate chordal melodic styling. His large life was dedicated to his art form seeking creative, authentic music expression through his guitar.

Highlights of his musical life:

Professional banjo player broadcasting on the radio at age 14
Changed to guitar in early 30's
Early credits Jerry Wald, Woody Herman's First Herd, Benny Goodman and Jack Teagarden 1941-46
Player of Be-bop with cool school stylist Lennie Tristano, Lee Konitz and Warne Marsh
Historical "Free Jazz" explorations and soloist on Tristano's recordings Intuition and Digression 1949
Recipient of several Down Beat and Metronome Magazine Awards
Recorded with Metronome All-Stars 1947-1953
Founded William H. Bauer Publishing Co. 1951 - dedicated to the preservation of Jazz transcripts of Lennie Tristano, Lee Konitz, and Warne Marsh and guitar instructional texts.
Served as an ABC staff orchestra guitarist
Freelance recording with the greatest players of all time
Leader of no-sittin' in jam sessions 1961-63 at Sherwood Inn, New Hyde Park, Long Island, New York with the finest swing and bop players of the day
Master guitar instructor for over 35 years at Billy Bauer's Guitar School in Roslyn Heights, Long Island, New York developed THE GUITAR INSTRUCTOR SERIES available on this website

Only solo album Plectrist

Known as one of the most progressive jazz players of his time or any era
Published autobiography Sideman in 1997 for future generations

Source: http://www.billybauersmusic.com/about-billy-bauer.htm

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Jazz guitarist Billy Bauer dead at 89

MELVILLE, N.Y.- Billy Bauer, a jazz guitarist who worked with Lennie Tristano, Benny Goodman and Charlie Parker, has died in Melville. He was 89. 

Bauer, who lived in Albertson, N.Y., died Friday of complications from pneumonia, said his daughter, Pamela. 

He developed much of his solo technique while playing with Tristano's group, which he joined in 1946. Before that, he had played mostly rhythm parts. 

Bauer recorded both with the band and with individual members, such as saxophonists Lee Konitz and Warne Marsh. He founded a publishing company, William H. Bauer Inc., to publish compositions by himself, Tristano, Konitz and Marsh. 

He went on to work with Goodman and Parker, and recorded one album as band leader: “Plectrist," from 1956. 

As the jazz recording industry began to fade, Bauer switched to teaching, opening the Billy Bauer Guitar School in Roslyn Heights, N.Y., on Long Island, in 1970. He continued teaching lessons until shortly before his death. 

Born in the Bronx, Bauer first played banjo and ukulele before changing to guitar in his teens. 

He wrote an autobiography called “Sideman." 

-- Associated Press

Source: All About Jazz Publicity

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Billy Bauer: Plectrist

Guitarist Billy Bauer recorded only one album as a leader.The album was Plectrist, and it featured Andrew Ackers on piano, Milt Hinton on bass and Osie Johnson on drums. Bauer wasn't shy. The reason for the sole leadership date was Bauer's workload as a sideman. Throughout the 1940s and 1950s, Bauer recorded relentlessly in bands and groups, preferring to play a supporting role. Producer Norman Granz virtually had to beg Bauer to record Plectrist for his Norgran label, cutting off Bauer repeatedly each time Bauer tried to explain how busy he was and why he couldn't do it.

Bauer had a natural, swinging style that was essential for keeping 1940s big-band rhythm sections on track. A superb sight-reader, Bauer had great taste in chord structures and improvisational lines. What's more, he was confident and clear, which is why he was in such demand. 

As the big bands gave way to smaller ensembles in the late 1940s and early1950s, guitarists increasingly were called upon to keep tempos and set moods. Like Mundell Lowe, Barney Kessel, Kenny Burrell, Johnny Smith, Dave Barbour, Chuck Wayne, Jimmy Raney and many other guitarists, Bauer was a journeyman, joining groups for brief periods and record dates before being yanked away by another leader or record producer, especially in the 10-inch LP era.

Between 1942 and 1946, Bauer played steadily with Woody Herman's band, known euphemistically as the First Herd. In the fall of 1946 Bauer joined pianist Lennie Tristano and bassist Clyde Lombardi to form the first Lennie Tristano Trio. Sessions followed with other artists, including small ensemble dates with bassist Chubby Jackson and trombonist Bill Harris, Bauer rejoined Tristano's trio in 1947, this time with John Levy on bass. In 1948, Bauer spent much of the year with Benny Goodman. By year's end, he was voted an All Star by Metronome magazine's readers.

As was customary, the magazine's poll winners were recorded. So in January 1949, the Metronome All-Stars made two sides, Overtime and Victory Ball. Today, the discs remain highly charged works that not only showcase the advancedforms of jazz emerging from bebop's wide shadow but also represent an historic convergence of talent. The other 1948 Metronome All-Stars were Dizzy Gillespie, Miles Davis, Fats Navarro on trumpets; Kai Winding and J.J. Johnson on trombones; Buddy DeFranco on clarinet; Charlie Parker on alto sax; Charlie Ventura on tenor sax; Ernie Caceres on baritone sax; Lennie Tristano on piano; Billy Bauer on guitar; Eddie Safranski on bass; and Shelly Manne on drums. Pete Rugolo was the arranger. Before you read any further, take another look at that trumpet section.

In March 1949, Bauer joined the groundbreaking Lennie Tristano Sextet, which included Tristano, Lee Konitz, Warne Marsh, Tristano, Arnold Fishkin and Denzil Best. The group experimented with impossibly difficult modal compositions such as Wow! and Cross-Current, radicalizing the cool jazz sound introduced a year earlier at the Royal Roost by the Miles Davis nonet. Aninteresting footnote: The Miles Davis nonet 78-rpm recordings (later packaged as the Birth of the Cool sessions) were made in January 1949, just three months before Tristano recorded his. An interesting footnote: They were recorded for the same label—and Lee Konitz played on both!

In March 1951, Bauer played on the modal Ezz-thetic sessionwith Miles Davis and Lee Konitz, which further advanced the Third Stream sound. In August, Bauer recorded on Chico O'Farrill Orchestra's Dance One session for Norman Granz's Clef label. A long string of recording dates followed for Bauer in 1952 and 1953.

In December 1954, Bauer's phone rang. It was Charlie Parker asking "B.B" if he was available to appear on a Clef session. It would turn out to be Parker's last studio recordings. The date was the second half of Granz's ill-conceived Cole Porter concept album that Parker never completed before his death in March 1955.

Right after the turn of the year in 1956, Bauer finally relented to Granz's nagging and agreed to record Plectrist. The word "plectrist" wasmade up by the session's producer and means one who skillfully uses a plectrum or a triangular plastic pic on the guitar's strings. The first four tracks of Plectrist were recorded on January 23, 1956, with another six captured on March 12. 

Bauer's playing swings on the up-tempo tracks and features gorgeous chords on the ballads. Bauer is so good on the album that he sounds as if he's accompanying himself. What you notice throughout, in addition to Bauer's beautiful taste, is Osie Johnson's drums. Johnson appeared on dozens of recordings in the 1950s, but it's rare to hear his drumming style and technique so distinctly. On Plectrist, you can hear clearly just how gifted a beat-keeper he was and why he was a favorite of so many session leaders of the period.

Milt Hinton, of course, keeps rock solid time all the way through.Again, because this is a small group with guitar as the lead, you hear exactly why Hinton was so beloved by session and club artists.

Andrew Ackers is the least-known player on the date. Ackers was a session pianist who worked steadily in the 1940s with bandleaders Jerry Wald and George Paxton, and with Carmen McRae in 1955. Bauer picks up the story about Ackers in the liner notes from the 2000 re-issue:

"I just grabbed a couple of guys I'd been working with. I had been on a lot of dates with Milt Hinton and Osie Johnson who did a lot of studio work in those days. I knew Andrew Ackers because I was working at NBC at the time, and Fran Warren, the singer, had a couple of little shows, and he was the conductor; every once in a while I was called to do a show with him.

We didn't get to play much on the shows, but weused to get together about an hour before a show and talk and play. Andy was a good accompanist; he backed me up very nicely, never got in my way. Some guys play well but they get in your way all of the time. Andy let me play.

So when I got the record date, I said, 'Well, I'll get Andy.' I could have gotten anybody—I probably could have gotten Lennie [Tristano] to do it—but I was with Andy a lot, and I like the way he accompanied me...

Norman wasn't in the studio when I made the album. It was just the musicians and an engineer. I'd say, 'Here we go!' and we'd play. I let everybody do what they wanted to do." 

For an example of Bauer and Ackers playing in completeharmony, dig the Bauer original ballad Night Cruise. Or the uptempo Irving Berlin standard, Maybe I Love You Too Much. Ackers had great taste. It's a shame he didn't record more.

Plectrist is a snapshot of the level of taste and talent that existed in early 1956, especially among guys who went from studio to studio earning a living on record dates. It's a sleeper album that's a must-own for any collection.

Source: www.jazzwax.com/2008/ 06/billy-bauer-ple.html

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Remembering Billy Bauer

Jazz Guitarist With Woody Herman, Lennie Tristano And Others Dies At 89

by Stephen Fratallone/Jazz Connection Magazine

Jazz guitarist Billy Bauer, who was a member of Woody Herman's thundering First Herd of 1944-1946, and who later worked with Lennie Tristano, Benny Goodman and Charlie Parker, died on Friday, June 17, 2005, in Melville, NY. He was 89.

Bauer, who lived in Albertson, NY, died of complications from pneumonia, said his daughter, Pamela. 

He developed much of his solo technique while playing with Tristano's group, which he joined in 1946. Before that, he had played mostly rhythm guitar. 

Bauer recorded both with the band and with individual members, such as saxophonists Lee Konitz and Warne Marsh.  

He founded a publishing company, William H. Bauer Inc., to publish compositions by himself, Tristano, Konitz and Marsh. 

He was twice named Best Guitar by Metronome's Readers' Poll from 1948-49 and from1949-50. He went on to work with Goodman and Parker, and recorded one album as band leader: Plectrist, from 1956. 

As the jazz recording industry began to fade, Bauer switched to teaching, opening the Billy Bauer Guitar School in Albertson, NY, on Long Island, in 1970. He continued teaching lessons until shortly before his death. 

Born in the Bronx, Bauer first played banjo and ukulele before changing to guitar in his teens. 

He wrote an autobiography called Sideman. 

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The following article on Billy Bauer was originally published in the September 2003 issue of Jazz Connection Magazine.

Guitarist Billy Bauer may have blended very well playing with many jazz musicians, but he was and continues to be a stand out plectrist in jazz music. Known best for his stints in Woody Herman's thundering First Herd and in pianist Lennie Tristano's alternative jazz ensembles, Bauer is one of the few jazz guitarists of his generation to avoid the influences of Charlie Christian and he is considered by many as a major living link in the evolution of the jazz guitar.

"One of the things I did was that I 'comped' with the ensembles and bands," said Bauer, 87, from his second-story guitar studio in Albertson, NY, on Long Island. "Not that what I did was ever done before. It was, but not to that extent. The basic thing is that I was so dumb that I would blend with whomever I played with. I played in Dixieland groups, swing groups, modern jazz groups, even Irish musical groups. I played with every kind of combination you can think of. Before he died, (trumpeter) Charlie Shavers told me he liked the way I backed him up. Even (drummer) Max Roach said the same thing. I blend well. I'm not trying to cut them."

By the end of the 1940s, Bauer was considered the best guitarist in jazz, winning the Metronome All-Stars Readers' Poll several times. His 1959 guitar solo on Greenway, remains a textbook example of his modern approach to harmony and composition that continues to inspire new generations of guitarists.

William H. "Billy" Bauer was born on Nov. 14, 1915, in Bronx, NY. His mother played organ in a church and his father, a German immigrant, was a vaudevillian song and dance man who performed under the name of Harry Nelson.

"My father's introduction was, 'Harry Nelson: He Says He Sings,'" Bauer said with a chuckle. "But he did get to be in a Broadway show called School Days."

Having an actor in the family was something that didn't sit well with the song and dance man's father who believed working hard at a craft was the only way to get ahead in their newly-adopted country.

"My grandfather didn't like my father to be an actor," Bauer said. "When my father went up to Ossining, NY, to open School Days, my grandfather told him don't ever come back home until you are ready to get a real job. Eventually, my father conceded. He came back and went to work in the print factory which my grandfather owned. He became a printer."

Bauer's grandparents also owned a board and livery stable where work horses and buggies were rented out. As a result, young Bauer and his numerous cousins got their first jobs working as stable boys, he said.

"Us kids had to do work," Bauer said. "We had to clean the stables and bring the horses food and water. My grandmother was married with six kids before she met my grandfather. After they were married, they had six more kids! I had a large collection of aunts and uncles."

As a family, the Bauer's always sang, especially during their weekly Sunday afternoon car rides to Almond, NY, 16 miles away, where the family congregated for coffee and doughnuts, Bauer said.

"We'd sing all the way up and all the way home," Bauer recalled. "We had an open-air Ford touring car, the ones that you had to crank up to get it started. We were one of four families on our block that owned an automobile."

At age 9, Bauer began his life in music via a broken leg.

"My mother got an old baby carriage and hired this 13-year-old girl to push me around all summer long," Bauer said. "A friend of mine gave me a pair of drum sticks and I started drumming on my plaster cast. My father came home one day with a ukulele and gave it to me to play. At that time, 'Ukulele Ike' was very popular on radio and records. By the end of that summer, I could play some tunes on the ukulele." ("Ukulele Ike," whose real name was Cliff Edwards, went on to greater fame in 1940 as the voice of the Walt Disney character, Jiminy Cricket.")

Shortly thereafter, Bauer's father presented his young son with a tenor banjo. The youngster took banjo lessons from a Mr. Beca, a street-wise man who owned the neighborhood candy store, Bauer said.

"Mr. Beca made me read music which gave me an advantage," Bauer said.

By age 12, Bauer became so proficient on the tenor banjo that his father got his young son jobs working in speakeasies, Bauer said.

"My father would see ads in the newspapers like 'Banjo Player Wanted For Saturdays,' or something like that, and he would take me to see the owners," Bauer recalled. "One of the owners, Johnny Lane, was skeptical about hiring me because of my age. My father said, "Why don't you try him? Let him play.' I played for him and he hired me. His wife had to bring me to the club when my father couldn't take me."

Although he entertained in speakeasies, Bauer seemed unafraid to play in an environment frequented by gangsters, he said.

"Nah, I was too dumb," he said. "I still am."

At 16, Bauer played his first out-of-town in residence job in Rockaway, NY, a place owned by noted gangster Waxy Gordon.

"We'd be sitting around for two days and all of a sudden people would come in and the boss would say, 'Get up there and start now,'" Bauer said. "We'd start playing and the whole place would get jammed."

During the summer after his junior year in high school, Bauer played in a band at various resorts in the Catskill Mountains. Upon his return to school on the first day after summer vacation, Bauer was boasting to friends, albeit in jest, about the many "adult" experiences of which he supposedly engaged. A teacher came along after overhearing the teen banjoist's comments and believing the comments to be inappropriate, whacked him over his hands with a yard stick. The incident led to Bauer dropping out of high school.

"I got up and said, 'That's it! I'm through!'" Bauer said. "I walked out and I never went back. My father never went to school either, so he didn't mind."

Bauer then began to hang out with bar room pianist Bob King, "who could play a million tunes," according to Bauer. The association helped the young plectrist to get his ear accustomed to playing just about any kind of song.

"I guess that's why I got work because I was schooled in just playing tunes," he said.

From there, Bauer played in a group at Broad Channel, NY, replacing a black band which never returned to perform at that venue. The group Bauer was in was hired to play for dancing and for musical back up for an all-black girl show.

"After a few nights at this gig, we knew why this black band never returned," Bauer said. "We started around 8:30 p.m. and the boss would put out bottles of gin, rye, and scotch on the bandstand. We couldn't leave the bandstand until everyone went home, and that could be 4 in the morning. Because of all the booze we drank, we had to go to the bathroom in shifts. If I had to go, the piano player and drummer would have to stay on stage and continue playing. If the piano player had to go, the drummer and I would stay, etc. It was like being held hostage."

In 1933, after Prohibition was repealed, Bauer made the switch to guitar as the usage of the stringed instrument was gaining popularity over the banjo in many bands. He continued playing banjo while in Leo Clinton's band, a seven-piece outfit from the Bronx. When Clinton suddenly quit, Bauer was made leader and the instrumental switch was made.

"I bought my first electric guitar when I became a leader, a Rickenbacker," Bauer said. "It was a plastic guitar that looked like a frying pan."

Also in Clinton's band at the time were drummer Russ Williams and a young enthusiastic piano player named Harry Raab, who emerged in 1944 as Harry "The Hipster" Gibson, combining song and jive. Gibson was best-known for tunes such as Who Put The Benzedrine In Mrs. Murphy's Ovaltine?, I Stay Brown All Year 'Roun', and Get Your Juices At The Deuces. Gibson died in May 1991 at age 75.

Bauer and Gibson worked together for one summer playing for a yacht club in New Jersey, according to Bauer.

"Harry wanted me to go and work with him in a group he called 'The Domino Boys: The White Boys With The Black Rhythm,'" Bauer said.

Bauer gigged with smaller groups around The Big Apple playing downstairs at one night spot while trumpeter Bobby Hackett was playing with his group upstairs at the same venue, Bauer said.

"That's where I met Bobby and I got to know him pretty well," Bauer said.

It was during this time that Bauer began listening with an attentive ear to the music of young guitar phenom Charlie Christian, who reached stardom with Benny Goodman's orchestra from 1939 to 1941. Christian died of tuberculosis in March 1942 at age 23.

"All the other guitarists went for Django Reinhardt, but he was a crazy player!" Bauer said.

Bauer then started getting jobs playing in larger bands such as those led by Henry Jerome, Carl Hoff, clarinetist Jerry Wald and Abe Lyman.

In 1943, Bauer joined Lyman, who led a solid and successful commercial outfit many years before the big band boom began. Prior to getting an invitation to join Lyman and his Californians, Bauer was working with a comedy show band at The Metropole, a famed nightclub in New York City.

"Lyman's booker, Al Pollack, told me that Abe was looking for a guitar player and he invited me to come over to the Lincoln Hotel where the band was playing and to play a set," Bauer recalled. "I started The Metropole job at 9 p.m. and Lyman's band started at 7 p.m. So I went over the next night."

When Bauer got on the bandstand, he noticed there wasn't any music for the guitar, he said.

"The band started to play and Abe pointed to me saying, 'You take it,'" Bauer said. "He didn't even ask me if I knew the tune or not. I got through the set and Abe said to me, 'Hey, Kid, when are you going to take it out of the case?' I got up and walked right out of the place."

As Bauer was making his way out of the hotel, Pollack came running after him and asked where he was going.

"Did you hear the way he talked to me?" Bauer replied angrily.

"Are you kidding?" Pollack replied. "After you started playing, Abe waved to me to get you. Don't be an idiot. You'll make about $8,000 next year. Abe treats the guys very well. Plus, we do nightly broadcasts."

Pollack smoothed things over with Bauer and the booker told Lyman that the guitarist would take the job.

In Lyman's band at the time were such outstanding musicians as Sy Zentner and Ray Heath on trombones; Marty Gold on Violin; Wolffe Tannenbaum on tenor sax; Bill Clifton on piano; and Sid Weiss on bass.

It was his friendship with tenor saxophonist Flip Phillips that eventually led Bauer to join clarinetist/alto saxophonist Woody Herman's orchestra in the spring of 1944.

I first met Flip when he was playing clarinet in (trumpeter) Frankie Newton's band," Bauer said. "We formed a sextet and we'd play after hours. One night Abe came to hear us and he liked it and wanted to put us on the next show to broadcast. We played one of my tunes, Burma Bomber."

Shortly thereafter, Phillips got the nod to join Herman, who was revamping his aggregation from "The Band That Plays The Blues" into an explosive modern jazz unit. Herman's earlier band had a hit in 1939 with Woodchopper's Ball.

A few weeks later, Bauer received a call from Herman to join the band.

"Flip recommended me to Woody," Bauer said. "I joined the band a few days later in Detroit."

Herman's new band, which would later become known as "The First Herd (1944-1946)," reflected spirited, muscle-flexing exuberance in its music. The band during this period boasted new and exciting young talents in Sonny Berman, Pete Candoli and his younger brother, Conte, Carl "Bama" Warwick, Ray Wetzel and Shorty Rogers on trumpets; Bill Harris and Ralph Pfiffner on trombones; Sam Marowitz and John LaPorta on alto saxophones; Phillips, Pete Mondello and Mickey Folus, tenor saxophones; Skippy DeSair and Sam Rubinowitch, baritone saxophone; and an ironclad rhythm section of Chubby Jackson, bass; Ralph Burns, Tony Aless, and later, Jimmy Rowles, piano; Bauer, guitar; Dave Tough and later, Don Lamond, drums; and Margie Hyams and later, Red Norvo, vibraphone. Burns and trumpeter Neil Hefti contributed stunning arrangements, while the band's "girl" singer, Francis Wayne, shared the vocal duties with Herman.

"It was a swinging band, that's for sure," Bauer said. "It had fire. I guess the rhythm section had something to do with it, too. The tight rhythmic sound just came. It seemed natural. Everyone just played the way they played. That was the good part."

As a member of Tristano's ensemble, Bauer was present when the group was one of five bands that helped open Birdland Jazz Club in mid-town Manhattan in December 1949. Also on the opening night's bill were groups led by alto saxophone genius Charlie Parker, who served as the inspiration for the famed jazz spot, tenor sax stylist Lester Young, pianist Art Tatum, and trumpeter Max Kaminsky's Dixieland unit.

"They had all different types of jazz to open the club," Bauer recalled. "Ours was just a little different."

Bauer's success with Tristano was also recognized when he was named Best Guitarist in Metronome's Readers' Poll for 1948-1949 and for 1949-1950. He participated in both traditional Metronome All-Star recording sessions. The 1948-49 All-Stars included Charlie Parker, alto sax; Charlie Ventura, tenor sax; Ernie Caceres, baritone sax; Buddy DeFranco, clarinet; J. J. Johnson and Kai Winding, trombones; Dizzy Gillespie, Miles Davis and Fats Navarro, trumpets; Lennie Tristano, piano; Eddie Safransky, bass; Shelly Manne, drums; and composer/arranger Pete Rugolo, conductor. The All-Stars for this recording session waxed for RCA-Victor (20-3361) Victory Ball and Overtime, a Rugolo composition.

"I remember we went over the allotted studio time to do the recordings and we named one of the tunes Overtime," Bauer recalled. "We just did one or two takes on a tune and that was it. In situations like that you get maybe eight bars to solo and if the whole band doesn't play good, you don't play good, then forget about it."

The 1949-50 All-Stars included Stan Getz, tenor sax; Lee Konitz, alto sax; Serge Chaloff, baritone sax; Buddy DeFranco, clarinet; Kai Winding, trombone; Dizzy Gillespie, trumpet; Lennie Tristano, piano; Eddie Safranski, bass; Max Roach, drums; and composer/arranger Pete Rugolo, conductor. The All-Stars on this recording session waxed No Figs, a Tristano original based on the chord progression of Indiana, and Double Date (Jan. 10, 1950).

Bauer continued to work in jazz throughout the 1950s, recording with the J. J. Johnson-Kai Winding band (Jay And Kai on Savoy Jazz, 1954), and with Tristano, Konitz and others, but most of his time was spent in studio work.

Tristano died in 1978 at age 59.

"With Lennie Tristano I was going broke," Bauer said. "I had a wife and two kids to support. It was OK working with these guys but we'd work one week, then we'd be out of work for two weeks. Then we'd maybe work three weeks somewhere, then we'd be out of work for a week. It got so that I couldn't even buy a house. I tried to buy a house, but then the banks would ask me where I was working. I'd have to say, 'Well, next week I'll be working at this club, and the week after that over here.' The bottom line was the banks refused me."

Bauer then heard of an opening for a guitar player at NBC. He auditioned for the job and became a studio musician.

"(Guitarist) Johnny Smith was leaving the studios to go into jazz and I was leaving jazz to get into the studios," Bauer said. "Meredith Wilson was the musical director at NBC and he liked my playing. He told the execs that I was the best rhythm guitar player he had ever heard. That sowed up the job for me right there! The following day I went to the same bank that refused my home loan a week earlier. When I told them I was working for NBC, they then approved my loan!"

Bauer worked for NBC for eight years doing The Bob And Ray Show, The Big Show with Tallulah Bankhead, and The Toast Of The Town with Ed Sullivan, among others. He also was hired out by the studio to do commercial "jingles" and to do outside record dates, including some duet work with Lee Konitz from the alto saxophonist's New Sounds album on Prestige Records, he said.

"I got some recognition doing duet recordings with Lee," Bauer said. "Lee has made it big. He's still going! He's made more records than anybody I ever heard. Every time he plays, he gets recorded."

From 1950 to 1953, Bauer also taught at the New York Conservatory of Modern Music and toured with Benny Goodman in Europe in 1958. He's on Goodman's Live At The Brussels' World Fair album.

After his work at NBC ended, Bauer began receiving calls to play in the pit orchestra for Broadway shows, most notably, How Now, Dow Jones, he said.

"I didn't like playing for Broadway very much because you were playing the same thing over and over again," Bauer said. "I didn't know if they liked me either. (laughs) I stuck it out for about three years."

During this period, Bauer continued to do free lance work in New York.

"Then that started to go because the whole music business went downhill," he said.

So, in 1970, Bauer opened an instructional studio for guitar players in Albertson.

"I'm still going at it," Bauer said with a laugh.

And what Bauer emphasizes at his music studio are the fundamentals, he said.

"I go back to the ABC's of the guitar," he said. "My students need to know the scales in all twelve keys. If they don't want to do that, I tell them that they shouldn't be here."

Reading music is also a high instructional priority for Bauer's students, he said.

"For guitarist's, they're given a G7 chord and that's it. Put any notation on it and they're lost," Bauer said. "Through that I can get into theory as to why things are the way they are."

Although Bauer may run the guitar school, he doesn't take any credit as a teacher, he said.

"I tell my students from the beginning that I'm not a teacher," Bauer said. "I'm an instructor."

That's not too shabby for a guy who claims he doesn't know anything.

"My students are teaching me just as much as I teach them," Bauer said.

In addition to guitar instruction, Bauer is also a published author. In 1997, he published his autobiography, Sideman, recounting his life as a jazz musician with prolific insights about his passion for music. The book may be purchased on line through Amazon.com at www.amazon.com or from Bauer himself by sending a check for $19.95 plus $3.50 postage to: William H. Bauer, Inc., P.O. Box 270, Albertson, NY 11507-0270.

Bauer continues to perform publicly on occasion. In 1995, he performed for Flip Phillips' 80th birthday party in Florida. Phillips died two years ago at age 86.

More recently, Bauer was part of an all-star Woody Herman alumni band that performed last November in Los Angeles to honor the late bandleader with a statue erected to his memory. Herman died in 1987.

"I just do what I can when I can," Bauer said. "I'm on the way out, but I still have something to give. If I can impart to my students just a little as to what I know, then it's all for the best."

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Thursday, February 19, 2009

DUKE ELLINGTON

Edward Kennedy "Duke" Ellington (April 29, 1899 – May 24, 1974) was an American composer, pianist, and bandleader.

Duke Ellington was recognized during his life as one of the most influential figures in jazz, if not in all American music. His reputation has increased since his death, including a special award citation from the Pulitzer Prize Board.

Ellington called his style and sound "American Music" rather than jazz, and liked to describe those who impressed him as "beyond category." These included many of the musicians who served with his orchestra, some of whom were considered among the giants of jazz and performed with Ellington's orchestra for decades. While many were noteworthy in their own right, it was Ellington who melded them into one of the most well-known orchestral units in the history of jazz. He often composed specifically for the style and skills of these individuals, such as "Jeep's Blues" for Johnny Hodges, "Concerto for Cootie" ("Do Nothing Till You Hear from Me") for Cootie Williams and "The Mooche" for Tricky Sam Nanton. He also recorded songs written by his bandsmen, such as Juan Tizol's "Caravan" and "Perdido" which brought the "Spanish Tinge" to big-band jazz. After 1941, he frequently collaborated with composer-arranger Billy Strayhorn, whom he called his alter-ego.

One of the 20th century's best-known artists, Ellington recorded for many American record companies, and appeared in several films. Ellington and his orchestra toured the United States and Europe regularly before and after World War II. Ellington led his band from 1923 until his death in 1974.

His son Mercer Ellington took over the band until his death from cancer in 1996. Paul Ellington, Mercer's youngest son, took over the Orchestra from there and after his mother's passing took over the Estate of Duke and Mercer Ellington.

Biography

Early life


Edward Kennedy Ellington was born on April 29, 1899 to James Edward Ellington and Daisy Kennedy Ellington. They lived with his maternal grandparents at 2129 Ward Place, NW in Washington, D.C. James Edward Ellington was born in Lincolnton, North Carolina on April 15, 1879 and moved to Washington, D.C. in 1886 with his parents. Daisy Kennedy, was born in Washington, D.C. on January 4, 1879, and was the daughter of a former American slave. J.E. made blueprints for the United States Navy. He also worked as a butler for Dr. Middleton F. Cuthbert, a prominent white physician, and occasionally worked as a White House caterer. Daisy and J.E. were both piano players—she playing parlor songs and he operatic airs.

At the age of seven, Ellington began taking piano lessons from Mrs. Marietta Clinkscales. Daisy surrounded her son with dignified women who reinforced his manners and taught him to live elegantly. From his father, he absorbed self-confidence. Ellington’s childhood friends noticed that "his casual, offhand manner, his easy grace, and his dapper dress gave him the bearing of a young nobleman", and began calling him Duke. Ellington credited his "chum" Edgar McEntree, "a sharp dresser himself," with the nickname. "I think he felt that in order for me to be eligible for his constant companionship, I should have a title. So he called me Duke."

Though Ellington took piano lessons, he was more concerned with baseball. "President Roosevelt (Teddy) would come by on his horse sometimes, and stop and watch us play," he recalled. Ellington went to Armstrong Technical High School in Washington, D.C. He got his first job selling peanuts at Washington Senators’ baseball games where he conquered his stage fright.

In the summer of 1914, while working as a soda jerk at the Poodle Dog Café, he wrote his first composition, "Soda Fountain Rag" (also known as the "Poodle Dog Rag"). Ellington created "Soda Fountain Rag" by ear, because he had not yet learned to read and write music. "I would play the 'Soda Fountain Rag' as a one-step, two-step, waltz, tango, and fox trot," Ellington has recalled. "Listeners never knew it was the same piece. I was established as having my own repertoire." In his autobiography, Music is my Mistress, (1973) Ellington comments he missed more lessons than he attended, feeling at the time that playing the piano was not his talent. Over time, this would change. Ellington started sneaking into Frank Holiday's Poolroom at age fourteen. Hearing the poolroom pianists play ignited Ellington's love for the instrument and he began to take his piano studies seriously.

Ellington began listening to, watching, and imitating ragtime pianists, not only in Washington, D.C., but also in Philadelphia and Atlantic City, where he vacationed with his mother during the summer months. Dunbar High School music teacher Henry Lee Grant gave him private lessons in harmony. With the additional guidance of Washington pianist and band leader Oliver "Doc" Perry, Ellington learned to read sheet music, project a professional style, and improve his technique. Ellington was also inspired by his first encounters with James P. Johnson and Luckey Roberts, early jazz piano giants. Later in New York he took advice from Will Marion Cook, Fats Waller, and Sidney Bechet. Ellington started to play gigs in cafés and clubs in and around Washington, D.C. and began to realize his love for music. His attachment grew to be so strong that he turned down an art scholarship to the Pratt Institute in Brooklyn in 1916. He dropped out of Armstrong Manual Training School, where he was studying commercial art, just three months shy of graduation.

From 1917 through 1919, Ellington launched his musical career, painting commercial signs by day and playing piano by night. Duke's entrepreneurial side came out when if a customer would ask him to make a sign for a dance or party, he would ask them if they had musical entertainment, if not Ellington would ask if he could play for them. He also had a messenger job with the U.S. Navy and State Departments. Ellington moved out of his parents' home and into one which he bought for himself as he became a successful ragtime, jazz, and society pianist. At first, he played in other ensembles, and in late 1917 formed his first group, "The Duke’s Serenaders" ("Colored Syncopators", his telephone directory advertising proclaimed). He was not only a member, but also the booking agent. His first play date was at the True Reformer's Hall where he took home 75 cents.

Ellington played throughout the Washington, D.C. area and into Virginia for private society balls and embassy parties. The band included Otto Hardwick, who switched from bass to saxophone; Arthur Whetsol on trumpet; Elmer Snowden on banjo; and Sonny Greer on drums. The band thrived, performing for both African-American and white audiences, a rarity during the racially divided times.

Marriage and family

With his career taking off, Ellington felt secure enough to marry his high school sweetheart, Edna Thompson, on July 2, 1918 when he was 19. Shortly after their marriage, on March 11, 1919 Edna gave birth to their only son, Mercer Kennedy Ellington, who went on to play trumpet, lead his own band and work as the road manager of his father's band, eventually taking it over after Duke's death. He was an important archivist of his father's musical life. Ellington's sister, Ruth, later ran Tempo Music, Ellington's music publishing company.

Ellington's granddaughter Mercedes is a dancer who has performed in network television productions. Grandson Paul Ellington is a pianist and composer who now leads the Duke Ellington Orchestra.

Early career

(Labels he recorded for: Blu-Disc, Pathe, Gennett, Vocalion, Brunswick, Columbia, Victor, OKeh, Harmony, Diva, Velvet Tone, Clarion, Cameo, Romeo, Lincoln, Perfect, etc., Banner, Conqueror, Domino, Oriole, Regal, Jewel etc., Hit Of The Week, Melotone, Decca, Master & Variety, Musicraft, Impulse!, Verve, Pablo).

When his drummer Sonny Greer was invited to join the Wilber Sweatman Orchestra in New York City, Ellington made the fateful decision to leave behind his successful career in Washington, D.C. and aspire to the challenge of Harlem. The 'Harlem Renaissance' was in progress. New dance crazes, like the Charleston, were bred there as well as African-American musical theater, including Eubie Blake's Shuffle Along. After the young musicians left the Sweatman Orchestra to strike out on their own, they found an emerging jazz scene that was highly competitive and hard to crack. They hustled pool by day and played whatever gig they could find. The young band met Willie "The Lion" Smith who showed them the scene and even gave them spare cash. They played at rent-house parties to get by. After a few months, the young musicians returned to Washington, D.C. feeling discouraged.

But in June 1923, a gig in Atlantic City, New Jersey led to a play date at the prestigious Exclusive Club in Harlem, followed in September 1923 by a move to the Hollywood Club, 49th and Broadway, and a four-year engagement which gave Ellington a solid artistic base. The group was called Elmer Snowden and his Black Sox Orchestra and had seven members, including James "Bubber" Miley, a trumpeter whose growling style changed the "sweet" dance band sound of the group to one that was edgier and hotter. They renamed themselves "The Washingtonians". When Snowden left the group in early 1924, Ellington took over as bandleader. After a fire, the club was re-opened as the Club Kentucky (often referred to as the "Kentucky Club"), an engagement which set the stage for the biggest opportunities in Ellington's life.

Ellington made eight records in 1924, receiving composing credit on three including Choo Choo. In 1925, Ellington contributed four songs to Chocolate Kiddies, an all-African-American revue which introduced European audiences to African-American styles and performers. "Duke Ellington and his Kentucky Club Orchestra" grew to a ten-piece organization, developing their distinct sound, displaying the non-traditional expression of Ellington’s arrangements, the street rhythms of Harlem, and the exotic-sounding trombone growls and wah-wahs, high-squealing trumpets, and sultry saxophone blues licks of the band members. For a short time, the great soprano saxophonist Sidney Bechet played with the group, imparting his propulsive swing and superior musicianship on the young band members. This helped attract the attention of some of the biggest names of jazz, including Paul Whiteman.

In 1927, King Oliver turned down a regular booking for his group as the house band at Harlem's Cotton Club; the offer passed to Ellington. With a weekly radio broadcast and famous clientèle nightly pouring in to see them, Ellington and his band thrived in the period from 1932 to 1942, a "golden age" for the poor boys from Washington D.C.

Trumpeter Bubber Miley was a member of the orchestra for only a short period but had a major influence on Ellington's sound. An early experimenter in jazz trumpet growling, Miley is credited with morphing the band's style from rigid dance instrumentation to a growling 'jungle' style. He also composed most of "Black and Tan Fantasy" and "Creole Love Call". An alcoholic, Miley had to leave the band before they gained wider fame. He died in 1932 at the age of twenty-nine. He was an important influence on Cootie Williams, who replaced him.

In 1927 Ellington made a career-advancing agreement with agent-publisher Irving Mills giving Mills a 45% interest in Ellington's future. The brash, shrewd Mills had an eye for new talent and early on published compositions by Hoagy Carmichael, Dorothy Fields, and Harold Arlen. During the 1930s, Ellington's popularity continued to increase, largely as a result of the promotional skills of Mills, who got more than his fair share of co-composer credits. Mills arranged recording sessions on the Brunswick, Victor, and Columbia labels which gave Ellington popular recognition. Mills took the management burden off of Ellington's shoulders, allowing him to focus on his band's sound and his compositions. Ellington ended his association with Mills in 1937, although he continued to record under Mills' banner through 1940.

At the Cotton Club, Ellington's group performed all the music for the revues, which mixed comedy, dance numbers, vaudeville, burlesque, hot music, and illegal alcohol. The musical numbers were composed by Jimmy McHugh and the lyrics by Dorothy Fields (later Harold Arlen and Ted Koehler), with some Ellington originals mixed in. Weekly radio broadcasts from the club gave Ellington national exposure. In 1929, Ellington appeared in his first movie, a nineteen-minute all-African-American RKO short, Black and Tan, in which he played the hero "Duke". In the same year, The Cotton Club Orchestra appeared on stage for several months in Florenz Ziegfeld's Show Girl, along with vaudeville stars Jimmy Durante, Eddie Foy, Jr., Al Jolson, Ruby Keeler, and with music and lyrics by George Gershwin and Gus Kahn. That feverish period also included numerous recordings, under the pseudonyms "Whoopee Makers", "The Jungle Band", "Harlem Footwarmers", and the "Ten Black Berries". In 1930, Ellington and his Orchestra connected with a whole different audience in a concert with Maurice Chevalier and they also performed at the Roseland Ballroom, "America's foremost ballroom". Noted composer Percy Grainger was also an early admirer and supporter.

In 1929, when Ellington conducted the orchestra for Show Girl, he met Will Vodery, Ziegfeld’s musical supervisor. In his 1946 biography, Duke Ellington, Barry Ulanov wrote: “From Vodery, as he (Ellington) says himself, he drew his chromatic convictions, his uses of the tones ordinarily extraneous to the diatonic scale, with the consequent alteration of the harmonic character of his music, its broadening, The deepening of his resources. It has become customary to ascribe the classical influences upon Duke - Delius and Debussy and Ravel - to direct contact with their music. Actually his serious appreciation of those and other modern composers, came after his meeting with Vodery.” Ulanov, Barry. Duke Ellington, Creative Age Press, 1946.

As the Depression deepened, the recording industry took a dive, dropping over 90% by 1933. Ellington and his orchestra survived the hard times by taking to the road in a series of tours. Radio exposure also helped maintain his popularity. Ivie Anderson was hired as their vocalist (Sonny Greer had been providing occasional vocals). Normally, Ellington led the orchestra by conducting from the keyboard using piano cues and visual gestures; very rarely did he conduct using a baton. As a bandleader, Ellington was not a strict disciplinarian but he maintained control of his orchestra for decades to come with a crafty combination of charm, humor, flattery, and astute psychology. A complex, private person, he revealed his feelings to only his closest intimates and effectively used his public persona to deflect attention away from himself.

While their United States audience remained mainly African-American in this period, the Cotton Club had a near exclusive white clientèle and the band had a huge following overseas, demonstrated both in a trip to England in 1933 and a 1934 visit to the European mainland. The English visit saw Ellington win praise from members of the "serious" music community, including composer Constant Lambert, which gave a boost to his aspirations to compose longer "serious" pieces. And for agent Mills, it was a publicity triumph, as Ellington was now "internationally famous". On their tour through the segregated South in 1934, they avoided some of the traveling difficulties of African-American musicians by touring in private railcars, which provided easy accommodations, dining, and storage for equipment, while avoiding the indignities of segregated facilities.

The death of Ellington's mother in 1935 led to a temporary slump in his career. Competition was also intensifying, as African-American and white "Swing Bands" began to rocket to popular attention, including those of Benny Goodman, Tommy Dorsey, Jimmy Dorsey, Jimmie Lunceford, Benny Carter, Earl Hines, Chick Webb, and Count Basie. Swing dancing became a youth phenomenon, particularly with white college audiences, and "danceability" drove record sales and bookings. Jukeboxes proliferated nationwide spreading the gospel of "swing". Ellington band could certainly "swing" with the best of them, but Ellington's strength was mood and nuance, and richness of composition, hence his statement "jazz is music; swing is business". The challenge for Ellington at that time was to create a workable balance between his ceaseless artistic exploration and the popular requirements of that era. Ellington countered with two innovations. He made recordings for smaller groups (sextets, octets, and nonets) drawn from his then 15-man orchestra and he composed pieces that were concerto-like and focused on a specific instrumentalist, as with Jeep's Blues for Johnny Hodges and Yearning for Love with Lawrence Brown.

In 1937, Ellington returned to the Cotton Club which had relocated to the mid-town theater district. In the summer of that year, his father died, and due to many expenses Ellington's financial condition was tight. Things improved in 1938 and he met and moved in with Cotton Club employee Beatrice "Evie" Ellis. After splitting with agent Irving Mills, he signed on with William Morris. The 1930s ended with a very successful European tour just as World War II loomed.

Ellington delivered some huge hits during the 1930s, which greatly helped to build his overall reputation "Mood Indigo" in 1930, "It Don't Mean a Thing (If It Ain't Got That Swing)" in 1932, "Sophisticated Lady" in 1933, "In a Sentimental Mood" in 1935, "Caravan" in 1937, "I Let A Song Go Out Of My Heart" in 1938. Following shortly were "Do Nothing Till You Hear from Me" in 1940 and "Take the "A" Train" (written by Billy Strayhorn) in 1941.

The most important event of Ellington’s “golden age” was the arrival of Billy Strayhorn. Hired as a lyricist, Strayhorn , nicknamed "Swee' Pea" for his mild manner, eventually became a vital member of the Ellington Organization and as Ellington described him, "my right arm, my left arm, all the eyes in the back of my head, my brain waves in his head, and his in mine". Strayhorn, with his Classical music training, applied that knowledge to arrange and polish future Ellington works. Ellington came to rely on Strayhorn's harmonic judgment, discipline, and taste.

Duke in the 1940s
 
Duke Ellington at the Hurricane Club in New York, May 1943.

The band reached a creative peak in the early 1940s, when Ellington wrote for an orchestra of distinctive voices and displayed tremendous creativity. In November 1943 Ellington debuted Black, Brown and Beige in Carnegie Hall which told the struggle of African-Americans, and began a series of concerts ideally suited to displaying Ellington's longer works. While some jazz musicians had played at Carnegie Hall before, few had performed anything as elaborate as Ellington’s work. Some of the musicians created a sensation in their own right. The short-lived Jimmy Blanton transformed the use of double bass in jazz, allowing it to function as a solo rather than a rhythm instrument alone. Ben Webster too, the Orchestra's first regular tenor saxophonist, started a rivalry with Johnny Hodges as the Orchestra's foremost voice in the sax section. Ray Nance joined, replacing Cootie Williams who had "defected", contemporary wags claimed, to Benny Goodman. Nance, however, added violin to the instrumental colors Ellington had at his disposal. A privately made recording of Nance's first concert date, at Fargo, North Dakota, in November 1940, is probably the most effective display of the band at the peak of its powers during this period. This recording is one of the first of innumerable live performances which survive, made by enthusiasts or broadcasters, significantly expanding the Ducal discography as a result.

Three-minute masterpieces flowed from the minds of Ellington, Billy Strayhorn (from 1939), Ellington's son Mercer Ellington, and members of the Orchestra. "Cotton Tail", "Mainstem", "Harlem Airshaft", "Streets of New York" and dozens of others date from this period.

Ellington's long-term aim became to extend the jazz form from the three-minute limit of the 78 rpm record side, of which he was an acknowledged master. He had composed and recorded Creole Rhapsody as early as 1931, and his tribute to his mother, "Reminiscing in Tempo," had filled four 10" record sides in 1935; however, it was not until the 1940s that this became a regular feature of Ellington's work. In this, he was helped by Strayhorn, who had enjoyed a more thorough training in the forms associated with classical music than Ellington. The first of these, "Black, Brown, and Beige" (1943), was dedicated to telling the story of African-Americans, the place of slavery, and the church in their history. Unfortunately, starting a regular pattern, Ellington's longer works were generally not well-received; Jump for Joy, an earlier musical, closed after only six performances in 1941.

The first recording ban of 1942-3 had a serious effect on all the big bands because of the resulting increase in royalty payments to musicians. The financial viability of Ellington's Orchestra came under threat, though Ellington's income as a songwriter ultimately subsidized it. Ellington always spent lavishly and although he drew a respectable income from the Orchestra's operations, the band's income often just covered expenses.

Meanwhile, the development of modern jazz, or bebop, the music industry's shift to solo vocalists such as the young Frank Sinatra as the Big Band age died out, and the diminishing popularity of ballroom and nightclub entertainment in the early television era all undermined Ellington's popularity and status as a trendsetter. Bebop rebelled against commercial jazz, dance jazz, and strict forms to become the music of jazz aficionados. Furthermore, by 1950 the emerging African-American popular music style known as Rhythm and Blues drew away the young African-American audience and soon Rock & Roll followed. In the face of these major social shifts, Ellington continued on his own course, but major defections soon affected his Orchestra and he started to retire earlier works composed for now departed members. For a time though Ellington continued to turn out major works, such as the Kay Davis vocal feature Transblucency and major extended compositions such as Harlem (1950), whose score he presented to music-loving President Harry Truman.

In 1951, Ellington suffered a major loss of personnel, with Sonny Greer, Lawrence Brown, and most significantly, Johnny Hodges leaving to pursue other ventures. Lacking overseas opportunities and motion picture appearances, Ellington Orchestra survived on "one-nighters" and whatever else came their way, even six weeks in the summer of 1955 as the band for the Aquacade in Flushing, New York. Even though he made many television appearances, Ellington's hope that television would provide a significant new venue for his type of jazz did not pan out. The introduction of the 33 1/3 rpm LP record and hi-fi phonograph did give new life to older compositions. However by 1955, after ten years of recording for Capitol, Ellington no longer had a regular recording affiliation.

Career revival

Ellington's appearance at the Newport Jazz Festival on July 7, 1956 returned him to wider prominence and exposed him to new audiences. The feature "Diminuendo and Crescendo in Blue", with saxophonist Paul Gonsalves's six-minute saxophone solo, had been in the band's book since 1937, but on this occasion it nearly created a riot. The revived attention should not have surprised anyone — Hodges had returned to the fold the previous year, and Ellington's collaboration with Strayhorn had been renewed around the same time, under terms amenable to the younger man. Such Sweet Thunder (1957), based on Shakespeare's plays and characters, and The Queen's Suite the following year (dedicated to Queen Elizabeth II), were products of the renewed impetus which the Newport appearance had helped to create.

A new record contract with Columbia produced Ellington's best-selling LP Ellington at Newport and yielded six years of recording stability under producer Irving Townsend, who coaxed both commercial and artistic productions from Ellington. In 1957, CBS (Columbia's parent corporation) aired a live television production of A Drum Is a Woman, an allegorical suite which received mixed reviews. Other festivals at Monterey and elsewhere provided new venues for live exposure, and a European tour in 1958 was wildly received. After a 25-year gap, Ellington and Strayhorn again wrote film scores, this time for Anatomy of a Murder and Paris Blues. Despite some personnel turnover, in 1960 Ellington still possessed a seasoned corps with Carney, Hodges, Williams, Brown, Nance, Hamilton, Procope, Anderson, and Gonsalves. Ellington and Strayhorn, always looking for new musical territory, produced adaptations of John Steinbeck's novel Sweet Thursday, Tchaikovsky's Nutcracker Suite and Edvard Grieg's Peer Gynt. The late 1950s also saw Ella Fitzgerald record her Duke Ellington Songbook with Ellington and his orchestra—a recognition that Ellington's songs had now become part of the cultural canon known as the "Great American Songbook".

Detroit Free Press music critic Mark Stryker concludes that the work of Billy Strayhorn and Ellington in Anatomy of a Murder is "indispensible, . . . too sketchy to rank in the top echelon among Ellington-Strayhorn masterpiece suites like Such Sweet Thunder and The Far East Suite, but its most inspired moments are their equal." Film historians have recognized the soundtrack "as a landmark — the first significant Hollywood film music by African Americans comprising non-diegetic music, that is, music whose source is not visible or implied by action in the film, like an on-screen band." The score avoided the cultural stereotypes which previously characterized jazz scores and rejected a strict adherence to visuals in ways that presaged the New Wave cinema of the ’60s."

In the early 1960s, Ellington was between recording contracts, which allowed him to record with a variety of artists mostly not previously associated with him. The Ellington and Count Basie orchestras recorded together and he made a record with Coleman Hawkins, plus some work for Frank Sinatra's new Reprise label. In 1962, he participated in a session which produced the "Money Jungle" (United Artists) album with Charles Mingus and Max Roach, and also recorded with John Coltrane for Impulse. Musicians who had previously worked with Ellington returned to the Orchestra as members: Lawrence Brown in 1960 and Cootie Williams two years later. Ellington was by now performing all over the world, a significant portion of each year was now spent making overseas tours, and he formed notable new working relationships, among which included the Swedish vocalist Alice Babs, and South African musicians Dollar Brand and Sathima Bea Benjamin (A Morning in Paris, 1963/2007). His earlier hits were now established standards, earning Ellington impressive royalties. "The writing and playing of music is a matter of intent.... You can't just throw a paint brush against the wall and call whatever happens art. My music fits the tonal personality of the player. I think too strongly in terms of altering my music to fit the performer to be impressed by accidental music. You can't take doodling seriously."

Last years
 
Ellington receiving the Presidential Medal of Freedom from President Nixon, 1969.

Ellington was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize in 1965, but was turned down. His reaction at 67 years old: "Fate is being kind to me. Fate doesn't want me to be famous too young." He performed the first of his Sacred Concerts‎, an attempt at fusing Christian liturgy with jazz, in September of the same year, and even though it received mixed reviews, Ellington was enormously proud of the composition and performed it dozens of times. This concert was followed by two others of the same type in 1968 and 1973, called the Second and Third Sacred Concerts, respectively. This caused enormous controversy in what was already a tumultuous time in the United States. Many saw the Sacred Music suites as an attempt to reinforce commercial support for organized religion, though Ellington simply said it was, "the most important thing I've done." The piano upon which the Sacred Concerts were composed is part of the collection of the Smithsonian's National Museum of American History. Like Haydn and Mozart, Ellington conducted his orchestra from the piano - he always played the keyboard parts when the Sacred Concerts were performed.
 
The grave of Duke Ellington

Though his later work is overshadowed by his music of the early 1940s, Ellington continued to make vital and innovative recordings, including The Far East Suite (1966), "The New Orleans Suite" (1970), and "The Afro-Eurasian Eclipse" (1971), much of it inspired by his world tours. It was during this time that Ellington recorded his only album with Frank Sinatra, entitled Francis A. & Edward K..

Ellington was awarded the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award in 1966. He was later awarded several other prizes, the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1969, and the Legion of Honor by France in 1973, the highest civilian honors in each country. He died of lung cancer and pneumonia on May 24, 1974, a month after his 75th birthday, and was interred in the Woodlawn Cemetery, The Bronx, New York City. At his funeral attended by over 12,000 people at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine, Ella Fitzgerald summed up the occasion, "It's a very sad day. A genius has passed." Mercer Ellington picked up the reins of the orchestra immediately after Duke's death.

Work in films and the theatre

Ellington's film work began in 1929 with the short film Black and Tan Fantasy. His Symphony In Black, which introduced Billie Holiday, was performed on film in 1935, winning an Academy Award as the best musical short subject. He also appeared in the 1930 Amos 'n' Andy film Check and Double Check. He and his Orchestra continued to appear in films throughout the 1930s and 1940s, both in short films and in features such as Murder at the Vanities, and Belle Of The Nineties, (1934), and Cabin In The Sky (1943). In the late 1950s, his work in films took the shape of scoring for soundtracks, notably Anatomy of a Murder (1959), with James Stewart, in which he appeared fronting a roadhouse combo, and Paris Blues, (1961), which featured Paul Newman and Sidney Poitier as jazz musicians.

He wrote an original score for Shakespeare's Timon of Athens that was first used in the Stratford Festival production that opened July 29, 1963 for director Michael Langham, who has used it for several subsequent productions, most recently in an adaptation by Stanley Silverman that expands on the score with some of Ellington's best-known works.

Ellington composed the score for the musical "Jump For Joy," which was performed in Los Angeles in 1941. Ellington's sole book musical, Beggar's Holiday, was staged on Broadway in 1946. Sophisticated Ladies, an award-winning 1981 musical revue, incorporated many of the tunes he made famous.

Awards and other recognition


Memorials

Numerous memorials have been dedicated to Duke Ellington, in cities from New York and Washington, DC to Los Angeles.

In Ellington's birthplace of Washington, D.C., there is a school dedicated to his honor and memory as well as one of the bridges over Rock Creek Park. The Duke Ellington School of the Arts educates talented students, who are considering careers in the arts, by providing intensive arts instruction and strong academic programs that prepare students for post-secondary education and professional careers. The Calvert Street Bridge was renamed the Duke Ellington Bridge; built in 1935, it connects Woodley Park to Adams Morgan.

Ellington lived for years in a townhouse on the corner of Manhattan's Riverside Drive and West 106th Street. After his death, West 106th Street was officially renamed Duke Ellington Boulevard. A large memorial to Ellington, created by sculptor Robert Graham, was dedicated in 1997 in New York's Central Park, near Fifth Avenue and 110th Street, an intersection named Duke Ellington Circle.

Although he made two more stage appearances before his death, Ellington performed what is considered his final "full" concert in a ballroom at Northern Illinois University on March 20, 1974. The hall was renamed the Duke Ellington Ballroom in 1980.

A statue of Ellington at a piano is featured at University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA's) Schoenberg Hall.

Tributes

Sathima Bea Benjamin -- South African vocalist wrote "Gift of Love" in memory of Duke Ellington on her 1987 album Love Light.
Dave Brubeck -- dedicated "The Duke" (1954) to Ellington and it became a standard covered by others, both during Ellington's lifetime (such as Miles Davis in 1957 on Miles Ahead) and posthumously (such as George Shearing in 1992 on I Hear a Rhapsody: Live at the Blue Note).
Tony Bennett frequently altered the lyrics to "Lullaby of Broadway" in live performance, to sing, "You rock-a-bye your baby 'round/to Ellington or Basie," as a personal tribute to the two jazz giants.
Judy Collins -- wrote "Song For Duke" in 1975, and included it on her album Judith.
Miles Davis -- one month after Ellington's death, created his half-hour dedicated dirge "He Loved Him Madly" (1974) collected on Get Up with It.
The jazz-influenced band Steely Dan recorded a note-for-note version of an early Ellington standard, "East St. Louis Toodle-oo," on their album Pretzel Logic, using treated slide guitars to re-create the plunger-muted "jungle sound" of the original Ellington horns.
Mercer Ellington -- (1919–1996) led The Duke Ellington Orchestra after his father's death.
Stevie Wonder -- wrote the song "Sir Duke" as a tribute to Ellington in 1976.
Paul Ellington -- leads The Duke Ellington Orchestra (1996-?).
Barrie Lee Hall, Jr -- often leads The Duke Ellington Orchestra in Paul Ellington's absence. Mr. Hall played in the orchestra under both the Duke and Mercer.
Charles Mingus -- composed "Open Letter to Duke"
Lorraine Feather -- has composed lyrics to many of Ellington's instrumental compositions,recorded on CD's including "Dooji Wooji" and "Such Sweet Thunder."
The Modern Jazz Quartet composed two original Ellington tributes for their album "For Ellington."

Homage from critics

Gunther Schuller wrote, "Ellington composed incessantly to the very last days of his life. Music was indeed his mistress; it was his total life and his commitment to it was incomparable and unalterable. In jazz he was a giant among giants. And in twentieth century music, he may yet one day be recognized as one of the half-dozen greatest masters of our time."

Martin Williams said "Duke Ellington lived long enough to hear himself named among our best composers. And since his death in 1974, it has become not at all uncommon to see him named, along with Charles Ives, as the greatest composer we have produced, regardless of category."

In 2002, scholar Molefi Kete Asante listed Duke Ellington on his list of 100 Greatest African Americans.

Grammy Awards

Ellington earned 13 Grammy awards from 1959 to 2000, nine while he was alive.Duke Ellington Grammy Award History
Year Category Title Genre Result
1999 Historical Album The Duke Ellington Centennial Edition
RCA Victor Recordings (1927-1973) Jazz Winner
1979 Best Jazz Instrumental Performance, Big Band Duke Ellington At Fargo, 1940 Live Jazz Winner
1976 Best Jazz Performance By A Big Band The Ellington Suites Jazz Winner
1972 Best Jazz Performance By A Big Band Toga Brava Suite Jazz Winner
1971 Best Jazz Performance By A Big Band New Orleans Suite Jazz Winner
1968 Best Instrumental Jazz Performance - Large Group
Or Soloist With Large Group ...And His Mother Called Him Bill Jazz Winner
1967 Best Instrumental Jazz Performance, Large Group
Or Soloist With Large Group Far East Suite Jazz Winner
1966 Best Original Jazz Composition In The Beginning God Jazz Winner
1965 Best Instrumental Jazz Performance -
Large Group Or Soloist With Large Group New Orleans Suite Jazz Winner
1959 Best Performance By A Dance Band Anatomy of a Murder Pop Winner
1959 Best Musical Composition First Recorded
And Released In 1959
(More Than 5 Minutes Duration) Anatomy of a Murder Composing Winner
1959 Best Sound Track Album - Background Score
From A Motion Picture Or Television Anatomy of a Murder Composing Winner

Grammy Hall of Fame

Recordings of Duke Ellington were inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame, which is a special Grammy award established in 1973 to honor recordings that are at least twenty-five years old, and that have "qualitative or historical significance."Duke Ellington: Grammy Hall of Fame Award
Year Recorded Title Genre Label Year Inducted
1932 It Don't Mean a Thing (If It Ain't Got That Swing) Jazz (Single) Brunswick 2008
1934 Cocktails for Two Jazz (Single) Victor 2007
1957 Ellington at Newport Jazz (Album) Columbia 2004
1956 Diminuendo and Crescendo in Blue Jazz (Single) Columbia 1999
1967 Far East Suite Jazz (Album) RCA 1999
1944 Black, Brown and Beige Jazz (Single) RCA Victor 1990
1928 Black and Tan Fantasy Jazz (Single) Victor 1981
1941 Take the "A" Train Jazz (Single) Victor 1976
1931 Mood Indigo Jazz (Single) Brunswick 1975

Honors and inductions

 
Ellington on the Washington, D.C. quarter due to be released in 2009.Year Category Notes
2009 Commemorative U.S. quarter D.C. and U.S. Territories Quarters Program.
2008 Gennett Records Walk of Fame
2004 Nesuhi Ertegün Jazz Hall of Fame
at Jazz at Lincoln Center
1999 Pulitzer Prize Special Citation
1986 22¢ commemorative U.S. stamp Issued April 29, 1986
1978 Big Band and Jazz Hall of Fame
1973 French Legion of Honor July 6, 1973
1973 Honorary Degree in Music from Columbia University May 16, 1973
1971 Songwriters Hall of Fame
1969 Presidential Medal of Freedom
1956 Down Beat Jazz Hall of Fame inductee
1968 Grammy Trustees Award Special Merit Award
1966 Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award
1959 NAACP Spingarn Medal

Further reading

Collier, James Lincoln. Duke Ellington, Oxford University Press, 1987. ISBN 0-19-503770-7
Dailey, Raleigh. "Ellington as a Composer for the Piano," in Jazz Research Proceedings Yearbook, #31 (Jan.2001), pp. 151-156.
Dance, Stanley. The World Of Duke Ellington, ISBN 0-306-80136-1
Ellington, Duke. Music Is My Mistress, ISBN 0-7043-3090-3
Ellington, Mercer K. Duke Ellington In Person, Houghton Mifflin, 1978. ISBN 0-395-25711-5
Ellington, Mercer K. Fast Facts. Duke Ellington.25 CMG WorldWide. February 1, 2007
Hasse, John Edward. The Life and Genius of Duke Ellington, Simon & Schuster, 1993, ISBN 0-671-70387-0
Tucker, Mark. Ellington, The Early Years, University of Illinois Press, 1991. ISBN 0-252-01425-1
Ulanov, Barry. Duke Ellington, Creative Age Press, 1946.

Duke Ellington discography

This is the discography of Duke Ellington. The majority of these recordings are listed under the year they were recorded, rather than released. Reissues are listed for most of the recordings released before the 1950s, as the original 78s are rare.

1920s

During the late 1920s and early 1930s, Ellington and his band recorded for the labels BluDisc, Pathe, Victor, Brunswick, Columbia, Okeh, Vocalion, Cameo, RCA-Victor, Plaza, Durium and ARC. Some labels, such as RCA-Victor, Okeh and Brunswick, have collected Ellington's early recordings into box sets, while material from other labels is scattered. The most comprehensive source for Ellington's early work are the Classics releases, although note that these records omit alternate takes, which may be found in other collections.

1926


1924-1926: The Birth of A Band Vol. 1 (EPM Musique) (released 1988)
The Birth of Big Band Jazz (Riverside) (EP) (released 1956)
Complete Edition (1924-1926) (Masters of Jazz)

1927

The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1924-1927 (Classics)
Complete Edition (1926-1927) (Masters of Jazz)

1928

Duke Ellington and His Orchestra: 1927-1928 (Classics) (Released 1996)
Duke Ellington and His Orchestra: 1928 (Classics)
Complete Vol. 1: 1925-1928 (Columbia - France) (released 1973)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1927-1928 (Classics)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1928 (Classics)
Complete Edition (1927-1928) (Masters of Jazz)
Complete Edition (1928) (2 discs) (Masters of Jazz)

1929

Flaming Youth (1927-1929) (RCA Victor) (Released 1965)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1928-1929 (Classics)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1929 (Classics)
Complete Edition (1929) (2 discs) (Masters of Jazz)

1930s

1930

The Okeh Ellington (Columbia) (1927-1930) (released 1991)
The Works of Duke: Vol. 1 - Vol. 5 (RCA) (1927-1930)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1929-1930 (Classics)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1930 (2 volume) (Classics)
Complete Edition (1929-1930) (Masters of Jazz)
Complete Edition (1930) (2 discs) (Masters of Jazz)

1931

Early Ellington: The Complete Brunswick Recordings (3 discs) (Decca) (1926-1931) (released 1994)
Jazz Heritage Brunswick/Vocalion Rarities (1926-1931) (MCA) (released 1983)
Mood Indigo (1927-1931) (Columbia) (released 1992)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1930-31 (Classics)
Complete Edition (1930-1931) (Masters of Jazz)

1932

Jungle Nights in Harlem (1927-1932) (Bluebird) (released 1991)
Jazz Cocktail (AVS/Living Era) (1928-1932)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1931-32 (Classics)

1933

The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1932-33 (Classics)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1933 (Classics)

1934

Early Ellington: 1927-1934 (Bluebird) (released 1954; CD release 1990 on RCA)
Duke Ellington 1927-1934 (Nimbus) (1991)
Great Original Performances 1927-1934 (Mobile Fidelity (released 1989)
Jubilee Stomp (Bluebird) (1928-1934)

1935

The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1933-35 (Classics)

1936

Rockin’ in Rhythm (1927-1936) (Jazz Hour) (Released 1996)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1935-36 (Classics)

1937

The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1936-37 (Classics)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1937 (2 volumes) (Classics)

1938

”Braggin’ in Brass: The Immortal 1938 Year” (Portrait)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1938 (Classics)

1939

Duke Ellington Playing the Blues (1927-1939) (Black and Blue) (Released 2002)
”The Duke’s Men: Small Groups vol. 2, 1938-1939” (Columbia/Vocalion)
”The Blanton–Webster Band (1939-1942) (RCA/BlueBird)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1938-39 (Classics)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1939 (2 volumes) (Classics)

1940s

The early 1940s saw limited output due to the recording ban, but Ellington did make annual visits to Carnegie Hall, listed below. In the January 1943 concert, Ellington introduced his first extended suite, "Black, Brown and Beige." This era also saw the appearance of the "Liberian Suite" and his highly regarded recordings featuring Jimmy Blanton and Ben Webster, "the best Ellington band" according to critic Bob Blumenthal.[1]

1940

”On the Air”
”Fargo, North Dakota, November 7, 1940” (Vintage Jazz Classics)
”The Duke in Boston” (Jazz Unlimited)
The British Connection: 1933-1940 (Jazz Unlimited)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1939-40 (Classics)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1940 (2 volumes) (Classics)

1941

”Take the ‘A’ Train” (Vintage Jazz Classics)
”The Great Ellington Units” (Bluebird)
"1941 Classics - Live in Hollywood" (Alamac)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1940-41 (Classics)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1941 (Classics)

1942

Hollywood Swing & Jazz (1937-1942) (Rhino)
”Never No Lament: The Blanton-Webster Band (1939-1942)

1943

”The Carnegie Hall Concerts: January 1943”
”The Carnegie Hall Concerts: December 1943” (Storyville)
Live at the Hurricane (Storyville)

1944

”The Carnegie Hall Concerts: December 1944”
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1942-44 (Classics)

1945

The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1944-45 (Classics)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1945 (2 volumes) (Classics)
The Treasury Shows 1943-1945 (13 double LPs) (D.E.T.S.)
Duke's Joint (1943-1945) (Buddha)
”The Duke Ellington World Broadcasting Series” (Circle)

1946

”The Carnegie Hall Concerts: January 1946”
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1945-46 (Classics)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1946 (2 volumes) (Classics)
The Great Chicago Concerts (Music Masters)
Happy Go Lucky Local (Musicraft)

1947

”The Carnegie Hall Concerts: December 1947”
”Daybreak Express”
Live at the Hollywood Bowl
Duke Ellington Vol. 4: April 30, 1947
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1946-47 (Classics)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1947 (2 volumes) (Classics)
Duke Ellington at Ciro's (Dems)
Liberian Suite (Columbia)

1948

”Live at Click Restaurant Philadelphia Vol. 1”
”Live at Click Restaurant Philadelphia Vol. 2”
Carnegie Hall 11/30/1948
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1947-48 (Classics)
Cornell University (Music Masters)

1949

The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1948-49 (Classics)
Duke Ellington at the Hollywood Empire (Storyville)

1950s

Ellington began the 1950s losing Johnny Hodges, Sonny Greer and Lawrence Brown. The second half of the 1950s, however, feature his famous "comeback" appearance at the 1956 Newport Jazz Festival, with Paul Gonsalves running through 27 choruses of "Diminuendo and Crescendo in Blue."

1950

Masterpieces By Ellington (Columbia)
”Great Times” (Riverside)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1949-50 (Classics)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1950 (Classics)
Live In Zurich, Switzerland 2.5.1950 (TCB Music)

1951

”Hi-Fi Ellington Uptown”
”Johnny Hodges, Duke Ellington, and Billy Strayhorn All Stars” (Prestige)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1950-51 (Classics)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1951 (Classics)

1952

”Duke on the Air”
”The Seattle Concert”
”Live at the Blue Note” (Bandstand)
”Duke Ellington at Birdland” (Jazz Unlimited)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1952 (Classics)
”Uptown” (Columbia)

1953

”Piano Reflections”
”The Pasadena Concert” (GNP)
”Premiered by Ellington”
”The Duke Plays Ellington”
”Ellington Showcase”
”Duke Ellington Plays the Blues”
”Ellington Uptown”
"Satin Doll"
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1952-53 (Classics)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1953 (2 volumes) (Classics)

1954

”Dance to the Duke”
”Duke Ellington Plays”
”Happy Birthday Duke! April 29 Birthday Sessions” (Laserlight)
”1954 Los Angeles Concert” (GNP)

1955

”Ellington ‘55”
”Duke’s Mixture”
”The Duke and His Men”
”Jazz Masters: 1953-1955” (EMI)
”The Washington, D.C. Armory Concert” (Jazz Guild)
”The Complete Capitol Recordings of Duke Ellington”
”The Carnegie Hall Concerts: March 1955”

1956

Ellington at Newport-Complete (1999; expansion and restoration of the complete 1956 Newport Jazz Festival performance)
”A Drum is a Woman” (Jazz Track)
”Duke Ellington and the Buck Clayton All Stars at Newport”
”Al Hibbler with the Duke”
”Historically Speaking: The Duke” (Rhino)
”Studio Sessions, Chicago, 1956” (LMR)
”The Complete Porgy and Bess”
”Ellington '56” (Charly)
”Blue Rose” (Columbia)
”Live From The 1956 Stratford Festival” (Music and Arts)

1957

Such Sweet Thunder (Columbia)
Ella Fitzgerald Sings the Duke Ellington Songbook
”Happy Reunion” (Sony)
”Live at the 1957 Stratford Music Festival” (Music & Arts)
”All-Star Road Band - Volume 2” (CBS)

1958

Ellington indigos
Newport Jazz Festival
”Jazz at the Plaza”(Columbia)
”Black, Brown and Beige (Live)”
”Blues in Orbit” (Columbia)
”Duke Ellington at the Bal Masque”
”The Cosmic Scene: Duke Ellington’s Spacemen” (Mosaic)
Duke Ellington and Johnny Hodges: Side by Side
”Blues Summit”
”Duke Ellington at the Alhambra”
”In Concert at the Pleyel Paris, 1958” (Magic)
”Duke Ellington At The Alhambra” (Pablo)
”Happy Reunion” (Sony)
”The Duke in Munich” (Storyville)

1959

Jazz Party (Columbia)
Festival Session (Columbia)
”The Ellington Suites”
Anatomy of a Murder (Soundtrack album) (Columbia)
Duke Ellington and Johnny Hodges: Back to Back
Elegant Mister Ellington
”The Duke’s DJ Special” (Fresh Sound)
”Live in Paris 1959” (Affinity)
”Live at the Blue Note” (Roulette)
”Back to Back” (Verve)

1960s

In the 1960s, Ellington made recordings with a number of top stars, including Count Basie, Frank Sinatra, Louis Armstrong, John Coltrane, Ella Fitzgerald and Coleman Hawkins. He also wrote and recorded a number of suites, such as his religious "Sacred Concerts", the "Perfume Suite" and the "Latin American Suite."

1960
”Three Suites” (Columbia)
”Piano in the Background” (Columbia)
”Piano in the Foreground” (Columbia)
”The Nutcracker Suite”
”Peer Gynt Suite/Suite Thursday”
”Swinging Suites by Edward E. and Edward G.”
”Paris Blues”
”Reminiscing in Tempo” (1928-1960) (Columbia)
”Unknown Session” (French Columbia)
”Hot Summer Dance” (Red Baron)
”Live At Monterey” 1960 (Status)

1961

Louis Armstrong & Duke Ellington (Roulette). Later re released in 2001 by Blue Note Records as The Great Summit.
”Together for the First Time! The Count Meets the Duke”
”S.R.O.”
The Girl's Suite & The Perfume Suite (Columbia)
Paris Blues (Ryko)

1962

Duke Ellington & John Coltrane
Duke Ellington Meets Coleman Hawkins
Money Jungle
Afro-Bossa (Reprise)
”Midnight in Paris” (Columbia)
”All American in Jazz” (Columbia)
”Will the Big Bands Ever Come Back?” (Reprise)
”Duke Ellington Featuring Paul Gonsalves”
”Studio Sessions, New York, 1962” (Saja)
”Recollections of the Big Band Era” (Atlantic)
”The Feeling of Jazz” (Black Lion)
”Duke 56/62” (in three volumes) (CBS)

1963

The Great Paris Concert (released 1973)
A Morning in Paris (released 1996, reissue 2007/08)
”Jazz Violin Session” (Reprise)
”Studio Sessions, New York, 1963” (Saja)
”In The Uncommon Market” (Pablo)
”Serenade to Sweden” (Telstar)
”My People” (Red Baron)
Wise Woman Blues” (Rosetta)

1964

”Hits of the Sixties: This Time By Ellington” (Reprise)
”Duke Ellington Plays Mary Poppins” (Reprise)
”Jazz Group 1964” (Jazz Anthology)
”Live at Carnegie Hall 1964” (Jazz Up)
”Harlem” (Pablo)
”All-Star Road Band” (CBS)
”At Basin Street East” (Music & Arts)
”London: The Great Concerts” (MusicMasters)
”New York Concert” (Musicmasters)

1965

Concert in the Virgin Isles (Reprise)
Ella at Duke's Place (Verve)
The Symphonic Ellington (Reprise) (1985 reissue)
The Duke at Tanglewood
Jumpin’ Pumkins
”'65 Revisited” (Affinity)
”Two Great Concerts” (1949 and 1965) (Accord)
”A Concert of Sacred Music From Grace Cathedral” (Status)

1966

Ella and Duke at the Cote D'Azur (Status)
The Far East Suite
Orchestra Works
The Pianist
Soul Call
Sacred Music (live)
Live at the Greek - 9/23/1966
The Stockholm Concert, 1966 (Pablo)
”In the Uncommon Market” (Pablo)
”Solo & Quintet: I'm Beginning To See The Light” (West Wind)

1967

...And His Mother Called Him Bill (Bluebird)
The Popular Duke Ellington
Intimacy of the Blues (Fantasy)
Johnny Come Lately
North of the Border in Canada
Live at the Rainbow Grill
”Beyond Category: The Musical Genius of Duke Ellington” (1927-1967) (Smithsonian)
”Live in Italy” (Jazz Up)
”1967 European Tour” (Lone Hill)
”Berlin '65 / Paris '67” (Pablo)
Collages
The Greatest Jazz Concert In The World (Pablo)
The Jaywalker* (Storyville)

1968

The Famed Fieldcup Concert
Francis A. & Edward K. (Reprise)
Latin American Suite (Fantasy)
Yale Concert (issued 1973) (Fantasy)
Second Sacred Concert (live) (Prestige)
”Studio Sessions, New York, 1968” (Saja)
”Live in Mexico” (Tring)

1969

70th Birthday Concert (Blue Note)
The Intimate Ellington
Up in Duke’s Workshop
Pretty Woman
Standards: Live at at Salle Pleyel
”April in Paris” (West Wind)

1970s

Ellington remained active to the end of his life, recording three final major suites in the 1970s, his "Third Sacred Concert," the "New Orleans Suite," the "Toga Brava Suite" and "The Afro-Eurasian Eclipse," his most explicit venture into what would be called "world music." His concert at Eastbourne was Ellington's final recording.

1970

New Orleans Suite (Atlantic)

1971

The Afro-Eurasian Eclipse (Fantasy)
Toga Brava Suite (Storyville)
”The English Concerts: 1969 and 1971” (Sequel)
”Up in Duke’s Workshop” (Pablo)

1972

Live at the Whitney (issued 1995) (Impulse)
This One's for Blanton (with Ray Brown)
”The Ellington Suites” (Pablo)

1973

Duke's Big 4 (Pablo)
Collages
Third Sacred Concert
Duke Ellington & Teresa Brewer: It Don't Mean A Thing If It Ain't Got That Swing (Columbia)
”Rugged Jungle” (Lost Secret Records)

1974

”Eastbourne”

Box Sets

The Centennial Edition: The Complete RCA-Victor Recordings (1999) (24 discs)
Complete Works: 1924-1947 (Proper UK) (2003) (40 discs)
The Complete Capitol Recordings (Blue Note) (1999) (5 discs)
The Duke Box (Storyville) (2007) (8 discs) 
1936-40 Small Group Sessions (Mosaic, 7 discs)
Early Ellington: The Complete Brunswick And Vocalion Recordings Of Duke Ellington, 1926-1931
The Private Collection (1956-1971) (Saja) (10 discs)
”The Reprise Studio Recordings” (Mosaic) (5 discs)

Ellington's 78-rpm recordings from 1924 to 1926, can be found on countless CDs, but often with very bad sound quality. The Centennial Edition, The Complete Brunswick And Vocalion Recordings and the Small Group Sessions stand out, being the most complete sets with far superior sound, often drawn from masters and mint condition records. Most of the remaining 78-rpm recordings for labels such as Okeh and Pathe, can be found on the French Classics series and the Complete Works: 1924-1947 box set.

Other

Duke Ellington's Incidental Music for Shakespeare's Play Timon of Athens, adapted by Stanley Silverman (1993). Ellington does not perform on this recording, but it includes previously unreleased compositions.

1920s

During the late 1920s and early 1930s, Ellington and his band recorded for the labels BluDisc, Pathe, Victor, Brunswick, Columbia, Okeh, Vocalion, Cameo, RCA-Victor, Plaza, Durium and ARC. Some labels, such as RCA-Victor, Okeh and Brunswick, have collected Ellington's early recordings into box sets, while material from other labels is scattered. The most comprehensive source for Ellington's early work are the Classics releases, although note that these records omit alternate takes, which may be found in other collections.

1926

1924-1926: The Birth of A Band Vol. 1 (EPM Musique) (released 1988)
The Birth of Big Band Jazz (Riverside) (EP) (released 1956)
Complete Edition (1924-1926) (Masters of Jazz)

1927

The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1924-1927 (Classics)
Complete Edition (1926-1927) (Masters of Jazz)

1928

Duke Ellington and His Orchestra: 1927-1928 (Classics) (Released 1996)
Duke Ellington and His Orchestra: 1928 (Classics)
Complete Vol. 1: 1925-1928 (Columbia - France) (released 1973)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1927-1928 (Classics)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1928 (Classics)
Complete Edition (1927-1928) (Masters of Jazz)
Complete Edition (1928) (2 discs) (Masters of Jazz)

1929

Flaming Youth (1927-1929) (RCA Victor) (Released 1965)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1928-1929 (Classics)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1929 (Classics)
Complete Edition (1929) (2 discs) (Masters of Jazz)

1930s

1930

The Okeh Ellington (Columbia) (1927-1930) (released 1991)
The Works of Duke: Vol. 1 - Vol. 5 (RCA) (1927-1930)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1929-1930 (Classics)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1930 (2 volume) (Classics)
Complete Edition (1929-1930) (Masters of Jazz)
Complete Edition (1930) (2 discs) (Masters of Jazz)

1931

Early Ellington: The Complete Brunswick Recordings (3 discs) (Decca) (1926-1931) (released 1994)
Jazz Heritage Brunswick/Vocalion Rarities (1926-1931) (MCA) (released 1983)
Mood Indigo (1927-1931) (Columbia) (released 1992)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1930-31 (Classics)
Complete Edition (1930-1931) (Masters of Jazz)

1932

Jungle Nights in Harlem (1927-1932) (Bluebird) (released 1991)
Jazz Cocktail (AVS/Living Era) (1928-1932)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1931-32 (Classics)

1933

The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1932-33 (Classics)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1933 (Classics)

1934

Early Ellington: 1927-1934 (Bluebird) (released 1954; CD release 1990 on RCA)
Duke Ellington 1927-1934 (Nimbus) (1991)
Great Original Performances 1927-1934 (Mobile Fidelity (released 1989)
Jubilee Stomp (Bluebird) (1928-1934)

1935

The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1933-35 (Classics)

1936

Rockin’ in Rhythm (1927-1936) (Jazz Hour) (Released 1996)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1935-36 (Classics)

1937

The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1936-37 (Classics)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1937 (2 volumes) (Classics)

1938

”Braggin’ in Brass: The Immortal 1938 Year” (Portrait)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1938 (Classics)

1939

Duke Ellington Playing the Blues (1927-1939) (Black and Blue) (Released 2002)
”The Duke’s Men: Small Groups vol. 2, 1938-1939” (Columbia/Vocalion)
”The Blanton–Webster Band (1939-1942) (RCA/BlueBird)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1938-39 (Classics)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1939 (2 volumes) (Classics)

1940s

The early 1940s saw limited output due to the recording ban, but Ellington did make annual visits to Carnegie Hall, listed below. In the January 1943 concert, Ellington introduced his first extended suite, "Black, Brown and Beige." This era also saw the appearance of the "Liberian Suite" and his highly regarded recordings featuring Jimmy Blanton and Ben Webster, "the best Ellington band" according to critic Bob Blumenthal.[1]

1940

”On the Air”
”Fargo, North Dakota, November 7, 1940” (Vintage Jazz Classics)
”The Duke in Boston” (Jazz Unlimited)
The British Connection: 1933-1940 (Jazz Unlimited)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1939-40 (Classics)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1940 (2 volumes) (Classics)

1941

”Take the ‘A’ Train” (Vintage Jazz Classics)
”The Great Ellington Units” (Bluebird)
"1941 Classics - Live in Hollywood" (Alamac)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1940-41 (Classics)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1941 (Classics)

1942

Hollywood Swing & Jazz (1937-1942) (Rhino)
”Never No Lament: The Blanton-Webster Band (1939-1942)

1943

”The Carnegie Hall Concerts: January 1943”
”The Carnegie Hall Concerts: December 1943” (Storyville)
Live at the Hurricane (Storyville)

1944

”The Carnegie Hall Concerts: December 1944”
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1942-44 (Classics)

1945

The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1944-45 (Classics)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1945 (2 volumes) (Classics)
The Treasury Shows 1943-1945 (13 double LPs) (D.E.T.S.)
Duke's Joint (1943-1945) (Buddha)
”The Duke Ellington World Broadcasting Series” (Circle)

1946

”The Carnegie Hall Concerts: January 1946”
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1945-46 (Classics)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1946 (2 volumes) (Classics)
The Great Chicago Concerts (Music Masters)
Happy Go Lucky Local (Musicraft)

1947

”The Carnegie Hall Concerts: December 1947”
”Daybreak Express”
Live at the Hollywood Bowl
Duke Ellington Vol. 4: April 30, 1947
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1946-47 (Classics)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1947 (2 volumes) (Classics)
Duke Ellington at Ciro's (Dems)
Liberian Suite (Columbia)

1948

”Live at Click Restaurant Philadelphia Vol. 1”
”Live at Click Restaurant Philadelphia Vol. 2”
Carnegie Hall 11/30/1948
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1947-48 (Classics)
Cornell University (Music Masters)

1949

The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1948-49 (Classics)
Duke Ellington at the Hollywood Empire (Storyville)

1950s

Ellington began the 1950s losing Johnny Hodges, Sonny Greer and Lawrence Brown. The second half of the 1950s, however, feature his famous "comeback" appearance at the 1956 Newport Jazz Festival, with Paul Gonsalves running through 27 choruses of "Diminuendo and Crescendo in Blue."

1950

Masterpieces By Ellington (Columbia)
”Great Times” (Riverside)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1949-50 (Classics)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1950 (Classics)
Live In Zurich, Switzerland 2.5.1950 (TCB Music)

1951

”Hi-Fi Ellington Uptown”
”Johnny Hodges, Duke Ellington, and Billy Strayhorn All Stars” (Prestige)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1950-51 (Classics)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1951 (Classics)

1952

”Duke on the Air”
”The Seattle Concert”
”Live at the Blue Note” (Bandstand)
”Duke Ellington at Birdland” (Jazz Unlimited)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1952 (Classics)
”Uptown” (Columbia)

1953

”Piano Reflections”
”The Pasadena Concert” (GNP)
”Premiered by Ellington”
”The Duke Plays Ellington”
”Ellington Showcase”
”Duke Ellington Plays the Blues”
”Ellington Uptown”
"Satin Doll"
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1952-53 (Classics)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1953 (2 volumes) (Classics)

1954

”Dance to the Duke”
”Duke Ellington Plays”
”Happy Birthday Duke! April 29 Birthday Sessions” (Laserlight)
”1954 Los Angeles Concert” (GNP)

1955

”Ellington ‘55”
”Duke’s Mixture”
”The Duke and His Men”
”Jazz Masters: 1953-1955” (EMI)
”The Washington, D.C. Armory Concert” (Jazz Guild)
”The Complete Capitol Recordings of Duke Ellington”
”The Carnegie Hall Concerts: March 1955”

1956

Ellington at Newport-Complete (1999; expansion and restoration of the complete 1956 Newport Jazz Festival performance)
”A Drum is a Woman” (Jazz Track)
”Duke Ellington and the Buck Clayton All Stars at Newport”
”Al Hibbler with the Duke”
”Historically Speaking: The Duke” (Rhino)
”Studio Sessions, Chicago, 1956” (LMR)
”The Complete Porgy and Bess”
”Ellington '56” (Charly)
”Blue Rose” (Columbia)
”Live From The 1956 Stratford Festival” (Music and Arts)

1957

Such Sweet Thunder (Columbia)
Ella Fitzgerald Sings the Duke Ellington Songbook
”Happy Reunion” (Sony)
”Live at the 1957 Stratford Music Festival” (Music & Arts)
”All-Star Road Band - Volume 2” (CBS)

1958

Ellington indigos
Newport Jazz Festival
”Jazz at the Plaza”(Columbia)
”Black, Brown and Beige (Live)”
”Blues in Orbit” (Columbia)
”Duke Ellington at the Bal Masque”
”The Cosmic Scene: Duke Ellington’s Spacemen” (Mosaic)
Duke Ellington and Johnny Hodges: Side by Side
”Blues Summit”
”Duke Ellington at the Alhambra”
”In Concert at the Pleyel Paris, 1958” (Magic)
”Duke Ellington At The Alhambra” (Pablo)
”Happy Reunion” (Sony)
”The Duke in Munich” (Storyville)

1959

Jazz Party (Columbia)
Festival Session (Columbia)
”The Ellington Suites”
Anatomy of a Murder (Soundtrack album) (Columbia)
Duke Ellington and Johnny Hodges: Back to Back
Elegant Mister Ellington
”The Duke’s DJ Special” (Fresh Sound)
”Live in Paris 1959” (Affinity)
”Live at the Blue Note” (Roulette)
”Back to Back” (Verve)

1960s

In the 1960s, Ellington made recordings with a number of top stars, including Count Basie, Frank Sinatra, Louis Armstrong, John Coltrane, Ella Fitzgerald and Coleman Hawkins. He also wrote and recorded a number of suites, such as his religious "Sacred Concerts", the "Perfume Suite" and the "Latin American Suite."

1960

”Three Suites” (Columbia)
”Piano in the Background” (Columbia)
”Piano in the Foreground” (Columbia)
”The Nutcracker Suite”
”Peer Gynt Suite/Suite Thursday”
”Swinging Suites by Edward E. and Edward G.”
”Paris Blues”
”Reminiscing in Tempo” (1928-1960) (Columbia)
”Unknown Session” (French Columbia)
”Hot Summer Dance” (Red Baron)
”Live At Monterey” 1960 (Status)

1961

Louis Armstrong & Duke Ellington (Roulette). Later re released in 2001 by Blue Note Records as The Great Summit.
”Together for the First Time! The Count Meets the Duke”
”S.R.O.”
The Girl's Suite & The Perfume Suite (Columbia)
Paris Blues (Ryko)

1962

Duke Ellington & John Coltrane
Duke Ellington Meets Coleman Hawkins
Money Jungle
Afro-Bossa (Reprise)
”Midnight in Paris” (Columbia)
”All American in Jazz” (Columbia)
”Will the Big Bands Ever Come Back?” (Reprise)
”Duke Ellington Featuring Paul Gonsalves”
”Studio Sessions, New York, 1962” (Saja)
”Recollections of the Big Band Era” (Atlantic)
”The Feeling of Jazz” (Black Lion)
”Duke 56/62” (in three volumes) (CBS)

1963

The Great Paris Concert (released 1973)
A Morning in Paris (released 1996, reissue 2007/08)
”Jazz Violin Session” (Reprise)
”Studio Sessions, New York, 1963” (Saja)
”In The Uncommon Market” (Pablo)
”Serenade to Sweden” (Telstar)
”My People” (Red Baron)
Wise Woman Blues” (Rosetta)

1964

”Hits of the Sixties: This Time By Ellington” (Reprise)
”Duke Ellington Plays Mary Poppins” (Reprise)
”Jazz Group 1964” (Jazz Anthology)
”Live at Carnegie Hall 1964” (Jazz Up)
”Harlem” (Pablo)
”All-Star Road Band” (CBS)
”At Basin Street East” (Music & Arts)
”London: The Great Concerts” (MusicMasters)
”New York Concert” (Musicmasters)

1965

Concert in the Virgin Isles (Reprise)
Ella at Duke's Place (Verve)
The Symphonic Ellington (Reprise) (1985 reissue)
The Duke at Tanglewood
Jumpin’ Pumkins
”'65 Revisited” (Affinity)
”Two Great Concerts” (1949 and 1965) (Accord)
”A Concert of Sacred Music From Grace Cathedral” (Status)

1966

Ella and Duke at the Cote D'Azur (Status)
The Far East Suite
Orchestra Works
The Pianist
Soul Call
Sacred Music (live)
Live at the Greek - 9/23/1966
The Stockholm Concert, 1966 (Pablo)
”In the Uncommon Market” (Pablo)
”Solo & Quintet: I'm Beginning To See The Light” (West Wind)

1967

...And His Mother Called Him Bill (Bluebird)
The Popular Duke Ellington
Intimacy of the Blues (Fantasy)
Johnny Come Lately
North of the Border in Canada
Live at the Rainbow Grill
”Beyond Category: The Musical Genius of Duke Ellington” (1927-1967) (Smithsonian)
”Live in Italy” (Jazz Up)
”1967 European Tour” (Lone Hill)
”Berlin '65 / Paris '67” (Pablo)
Collages
The Greatest Jazz Concert In The World (Pablo)
The Jaywalker* (Storyville)

1968

The Famed Fieldcup Concert
Francis A. & Edward K. (Reprise)
Latin American Suite (Fantasy)
Yale Concert (issued 1973) (Fantasy)
Second Sacred Concert (live) (Prestige)
”Studio Sessions, New York, 1968” (Saja)
”Live in Mexico” (Tring)

1969

70th Birthday Concert (Blue Note)
The Intimate Ellington
Up in Duke’s Workshop
Pretty Woman
Standards: Live at at Salle Pleyel
”April in Paris” (West Wind)

1970s

Ellington remained active to the end of his life, recording three final major suites in the 1970s, his "Third Sacred Concert," the "New Orleans Suite," the "Toga Brava Suite" and "The Afro-Eurasian Eclipse," his most explicit venture into what would be called "world music." His concert at Eastbourne was Ellington's final recording.

1970

New Orleans Suite (Atlantic)

1971

The Afro-Eurasian Eclipse (Fantasy)
Toga Brava Suite (Storyville)
”The English Concerts: 1969 and 1971” (Sequel)
”Up in Duke’s Workshop” (Pablo)

1972

Live at the Whitney (issued 1995) (Impulse)
This One's for Blanton (with Ray Brown)
”The Ellington Suites” (Pablo)

1973

Duke's Big 4 (Pablo)
Collages
Third Sacred Concert
Duke Ellington & Teresa Brewer: It Don't Mean A Thing If It Ain't Got That Swing (Columbia)
”Rugged Jungle” (Lost Secret Records)

1974

”Eastbourne”

Box Sets

The Centennial Edition: The Complete RCA-Victor Recordings (1999) (24 discs)
Complete Works: 1924-1947 (Proper UK) (2003) (40 discs)
The Complete Capitol Recordings (Blue Note) (1999) (5 discs)
The Duke Box (Storyville) (2007) (8 discs) 
1936-40 Small Group Sessions (Mosaic, 7 discs)
Early Ellington: The Complete Brunswick And Vocalion Recordings Of Duke Ellington, 1926-1931
The Private Collection (1956-1971) (Saja) (10 discs)
”The Reprise Studio Recordings” (Mosaic) (5 discs)

Ellington's 78-rpm recordings from 1924 to 1926, can be found on countless CDs, but often with very bad sound quality. The Centennial Edition, The Complete Brunswick And Vocalion Recordings and the Small Group Sessions stand out, being the most complete sets with far superior sound, often drawn from masters and mint condition records. Most of the remaining 78-rpm recordings for labels such as Okeh and Pathe, can be found on the French Classics series and the Complete Works: 1924-1947 box set.

Other

Duke Ellington's Incidental Music for Shakespeare's Play Timon of Athens, adapted by Stanley Silverman (1993). Ellington does not perform on this recording, but it includes previously unreleased compositions.

1920s

During the late 1920s and early 1930s, Ellington and his band recorded for the labels BluDisc, Pathe, Victor, Brunswick, Columbia, Okeh, Vocalion, Cameo, RCA-Victor, Plaza, Durium and ARC. Some labels, such as RCA-Victor, Okeh and Brunswick, have collected Ellington's early recordings into box sets, while material from other labels is scattered. The most comprehensive source for Ellington's early work are the Classics releases, although note that these records omit alternate takes, which may be found in other collections.

1926

1924-1926: The Birth of A Band Vol. 1 (EPM Musique) (released 1988)
The Birth of Big Band Jazz (Riverside) (EP) (released 1956)
Complete Edition (1924-1926) (Masters of Jazz)

1927

The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1924-1927 (Classics)
Complete Edition (1926-1927) (Masters of Jazz)

1928

Duke Ellington and His Orchestra: 1927-1928 (Classics) (Released 1996)
Duke Ellington and His Orchestra: 1928 (Classics)
Complete Vol. 1: 1925-1928 (Columbia - France) (released 1973)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1927-1928 (Classics)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1928 (Classics)
Complete Edition (1927-1928) (Masters of Jazz)
Complete Edition (1928) (2 discs) (Masters of Jazz)

1929

Flaming Youth (1927-1929) (RCA Victor) (Released 1965)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1928-1929 (Classics)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1929 (Classics)
Complete Edition (1929) (2 discs) (Masters of Jazz)

1930s

1930

The Okeh Ellington (Columbia) (1927-1930) (released 1991)
The Works of Duke: Vol. 1 - Vol. 5 (RCA) (1927-1930)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1929-1930 (Classics)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1930 (2 volume) (Classics)
Complete Edition (1929-1930) (Masters of Jazz)
Complete Edition (1930) (2 discs) (Masters of Jazz)

1931

Early Ellington: The Complete Brunswick Recordings (3 discs) (Decca) (1926-1931) (released 1994)
Jazz Heritage Brunswick/Vocalion Rarities (1926-1931) (MCA) (released 1983)
Mood Indigo (1927-1931) (Columbia) (released 1992)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1930-31 (Classics)
Complete Edition (1930-1931) (Masters of Jazz)

1932

Jungle Nights in Harlem (1927-1932) (Bluebird) (released 1991)
Jazz Cocktail (AVS/Living Era) (1928-1932)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1931-32 (Classics)

1933

The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1932-33 (Classics)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1933 (Classics)

1934

Early Ellington: 1927-1934 (Bluebird) (released 1954; CD release 1990 on RCA)
Duke Ellington 1927-1934 (Nimbus) (1991)
Great Original Performances 1927-1934 (Mobile Fidelity (released 1989)
Jubilee Stomp (Bluebird) (1928-1934)

1935

The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1933-35 (Classics)

1936

Rockin’ in Rhythm (1927-1936) (Jazz Hour) (Released 1996)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1935-36 (Classics)

1937

The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1936-37 (Classics)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1937 (2 volumes) (Classics)

1938

”Braggin’ in Brass: The Immortal 1938 Year” (Portrait)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1938 (Classics)

1939

Duke Ellington Playing the Blues (1927-1939) (Black and Blue) (Released 2002)
”The Duke’s Men: Small Groups vol. 2, 1938-1939” (Columbia/Vocalion)
”The Blanton–Webster Band (1939-1942) (RCA/BlueBird)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1938-39 (Classics)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1939 (2 volumes) (Classics)

1940s

The early 1940s saw limited output due to the recording ban, but Ellington did make annual visits to Carnegie Hall, listed below. In the January 1943 concert, Ellington introduced his first extended suite, "Black, Brown and Beige." This era also saw the appearance of the "Liberian Suite" and his highly regarded recordings featuring Jimmy Blanton and Ben Webster, "the best Ellington band" according to critic Bob Blumenthal.[1]

1940

”On the Air”
”Fargo, North Dakota, November 7, 1940” (Vintage Jazz Classics)
”The Duke in Boston” (Jazz Unlimited)
The British Connection: 1933-1940 (Jazz Unlimited)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1939-40 (Classics)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1940 (2 volumes) (Classics)

1941

”Take the ‘A’ Train” (Vintage Jazz Classics)
”The Great Ellington Units” (Bluebird)
"1941 Classics - Live in Hollywood" (Alamac)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1940-41 (Classics)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1941 (Classics)

1942

Hollywood Swing & Jazz (1937-1942) (Rhino)
”Never No Lament: The Blanton-Webster Band (1939-1942)

1943

”The Carnegie Hall Concerts: January 1943”
”The Carnegie Hall Concerts: December 1943” (Storyville)
Live at the Hurricane (Storyville)

1944

”The Carnegie Hall Concerts: December 1944”
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1942-44 (Classics)

1945

The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1944-45 (Classics)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1945 (2 volumes) (Classics)
The Treasury Shows 1943-1945 (13 double LPs) (D.E.T.S.)
Duke's Joint (1943-1945) (Buddha)
”The Duke Ellington World Broadcasting Series” (Circle)

1946

”The Carnegie Hall Concerts: January 1946”
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1945-46 (Classics)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1946 (2 volumes) (Classics)
The Great Chicago Concerts (Music Masters)
Happy Go Lucky Local (Musicraft)

1947

”The Carnegie Hall Concerts: December 1947”
”Daybreak Express”
Live at the Hollywood Bowl
Duke Ellington Vol. 4: April 30, 1947
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1946-47 (Classics)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1947 (2 volumes) (Classics)
Duke Ellington at Ciro's (Dems)
Liberian Suite (Columbia)

1948

”Live at Click Restaurant Philadelphia Vol. 1”
”Live at Click Restaurant Philadelphia Vol. 2”
Carnegie Hall 11/30/1948
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1947-48 (Classics)
Cornell University (Music Masters)

1949

The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1948-49 (Classics)
Duke Ellington at the Hollywood Empire (Storyville)

1950s

Ellington began the 1950s losing Johnny Hodges, Sonny Greer and Lawrence Brown. The second half of the 1950s, however, feature his famous "comeback" appearance at the 1956 Newport Jazz Festival, with Paul Gonsalves running through 27 choruses of "Diminuendo and Crescendo in Blue."

1950

Masterpieces By Ellington (Columbia)
”Great Times” (Riverside)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1949-50 (Classics)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1950 (Classics)
Live In Zurich, Switzerland 2.5.1950 (TCB Music)

1951

”Hi-Fi Ellington Uptown”
”Johnny Hodges, Duke Ellington, and Billy Strayhorn All Stars” (Prestige)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1950-51 (Classics)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1951 (Classics)

1952

”Duke on the Air”
”The Seattle Concert”
”Live at the Blue Note” (Bandstand)
”Duke Ellington at Birdland” (Jazz Unlimited)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1952 (Classics)
”Uptown” (Columbia)

1953

”Piano Reflections”
”The Pasadena Concert” (GNP)
”Premiered by Ellington”
”The Duke Plays Ellington”
”Ellington Showcase”
”Duke Ellington Plays the Blues”
”Ellington Uptown”
"Satin Doll"
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1952-53 (Classics)
The Chronological Duke Ellington & His Orchestra 1953 (2 volumes) (Classics)

1954

”Dance to the Duke”
”Duke Ellington Plays”
”Happy Birthday Duke! April 29 Birthday Sessions” (Laserlight)
”1954 Los Angeles Concert” (GNP)

1955

”Ellington ‘55”
”Duke’s Mixture”
”The Duke and His Men”
”Jazz Masters: 1953-1955” (EMI)
”The Washington, D.C. Armory Concert” (Jazz Guild)
”The Complete Capitol Recordings of Duke Ellington”
”The Carnegie Hall Concerts: March 1955”

1956

Ellington at Newport-Complete (1999; expansion and restoration of the complete 1956 Newport Jazz Festival performance)
”A Drum is a Woman” (Jazz Track)
”Duke Ellington and the Buck Clayton All Stars at Newport”
”Al Hibbler with the Duke”
”Historically Speaking: The Duke” (Rhino)
”Studio Sessions, Chicago, 1956” (LMR)
”The Complete Porgy and Bess”
”Ellington '56” (Charly)
”Blue Rose” (Columbia)
”Live From The 1956 Stratford Festival” (Music and Arts)

1957

Such Sweet Thunder (Columbia)
Ella Fitzgerald Sings the Duke Ellington Songbook
”Happy Reunion” (Sony)
”Live at the 1957 Stratford Music Festival” (Music & Arts)
”All-Star Road Band - Volume 2” (CBS)

1958

Ellington indigos
Newport Jazz Festival
”Jazz at the Plaza”(Columbia)
”Black, Brown and Beige (Live)”
”Blues in Orbit” (Columbia)
”Duke Ellington at the Bal Masque”
”The Cosmic Scene: Duke Ellington’s Spacemen” (Mosaic)
Duke Ellington and Johnny Hodges: Side by Side
”Blues Summit”
”Duke Ellington at the Alhambra”
”In Concert at the Pleyel Paris, 1958” (Magic)
”Duke Ellington At The Alhambra” (Pablo)
”Happy Reunion” (Sony)
”The Duke in Munich” (Storyville)

1959

Jazz Party (Columbia)
Festival Session (Columbia)
”The Ellington Suites”
Anatomy of a Murder (Soundtrack album) (Columbia)
Duke Ellington and Johnny Hodges: Back to Back
Elegant Mister Ellington
”The Duke’s DJ Special” (Fresh Sound)
”Live in Paris 1959” (Affinity)
”Live at the Blue Note” (Roulette)
”Back to Back” (Verve)

1960s

In the 1960s, Ellington made recordings with a number of top stars, including Count Basie, Frank Sinatra, Louis Armstrong, John Coltrane, Ella Fitzgerald and Coleman Hawkins. He also wrote and recorded a number of suites, such as his religious "Sacred Concerts", the "Perfume Suite" and the "Latin American Suite."

1960

”Three Suites” (Columbia)
”Piano in the Background” (Columbia)
”Piano in the Foreground” (Columbia)
”The Nutcracker Suite”
”Peer Gynt Suite/Suite Thursday”
”Swinging Suites by Edward E. and Edward G.”
”Paris Blues”
”Reminiscing in Tempo” (1928-1960) (Columbia)
”Unknown Session” (French Columbia)
”Hot Summer Dance” (Red Baron)
”Live At Monterey” 1960 (Status)

1961

Louis Armstrong & Duke Ellington (Roulette). Later re released in 2001 by Blue Note Records as The Great Summit.
”Together for the First Time! The Count Meets the Duke”
”S.R.O.”
The Girl's Suite & The Perfume Suite (Columbia)
Paris Blues (Ryko)

1962

Duke Ellington & John Coltrane
Duke Ellington Meets Coleman Hawkins
Money Jungle
Afro-Bossa (Reprise)
”Midnight in Paris” (Columbia)
”All American in Jazz” (Columbia)
”Will the Big Bands Ever Come Back?” (Reprise)
”Duke Ellington Featuring Paul Gonsalves”
”Studio Sessions, New York, 1962” (Saja)
”Recollections of the Big Band Era” (Atlantic)
”The Feeling of Jazz” (Black Lion)
”Duke 56/62” (in three volumes) (CBS)

1963

The Great Paris Concert (released 1973)
A Morning in Paris (released 1996, reissue 2007/08)
”Jazz Violin Session” (Reprise)
”Studio Sessions, New York, 1963” (Saja)
”In The Uncommon Market” (Pablo)
”Serenade to Sweden” (Telstar)
”My People” (Red Baron)
Wise Woman Blues” (Rosetta)

1964

”Hits of the Sixties: This Time By Ellington” (Reprise)
”Duke Ellington Plays Mary Poppins” (Reprise)
”Jazz Group 1964” (Jazz Anthology)
”Live at Carnegie Hall 1964” (Jazz Up)
”Harlem” (Pablo)
”All-Star Road Band” (CBS)
”At Basin Street East” (Music & Arts)
”London: The Great Concerts” (MusicMasters)
”New York Concert” (Musicmasters)

1965

Concert in the Virgin Isles (Reprise)
Ella at Duke's Place (Verve)
The Symphonic Ellington (Reprise) (1985 reissue)
The Duke at Tanglewood
Jumpin’ Pumkins
”'65 Revisited” (Affinity)
”Two Great Concerts” (1949 and 1965) (Accord)
”A Concert of Sacred Music From Grace Cathedral” (Status)

1966

Ella and Duke at the Cote D'Azur (Status)
The Far East Suite
Orchestra Works
The Pianist
Soul Call
Sacred Music (live)
Live at the Greek - 9/23/1966
The Stockholm Concert, 1966 (Pablo)
”In the Uncommon Market” (Pablo)
”Solo & Quintet: I'm Beginning To See The Light” (West Wind)

1967

...And His Mother Called Him Bill (Bluebird)
The Popular Duke Ellington
Intimacy of the Blues (Fantasy)
Johnny Come Lately
North of the Border in Canada
Live at the Rainbow Grill
”Beyond Category: The Musical Genius of Duke Ellington” (1927-1967) (Smithsonian)
”Live in Italy” (Jazz Up)
”1967 European Tour” (Lone Hill)
”Berlin '65 / Paris '67” (Pablo)
Collages
The Greatest Jazz Concert In The World (Pablo)
The Jaywalker* (Storyville)

1968

The Famed Fieldcup Concert
Francis A. & Edward K. (Reprise)
Latin American Suite (Fantasy)
Yale Concert (issued 1973) (Fantasy)
Second Sacred Concert (live) (Prestige)
”Studio Sessions, New York, 1968” (Saja)
”Live in Mexico” (Tring)

1969

70th Birthday Concert (Blue Note)
The Intimate Ellington
Up in Duke’s Workshop
Pretty Woman
Standards: Live at at Salle Pleyel
”April in Paris” (West Wind)

1970s

Ellington remained active to the end of his life, recording three final major suites in the 1970s, his "Third Sacred Concert," the "New Orleans Suite," the "Toga Brava Suite" and "The Afro-Eurasian Eclipse," his most explicit venture into what would be called "world music." His concert at Eastbourne was Ellington's final recording.

1970

New Orleans Suite (Atlantic)

1971

The Afro-Eurasian Eclipse (Fantasy)
Toga Brava Suite (Storyville)
”The English Concerts: 1969 and 1971” (Sequel)
”Up in Duke’s Workshop” (Pablo)

1972

Live at the Whitney (issued 1995) (Impulse)
This One's for Blanton (with Ray Brown)
”The Ellington Suites” (Pablo)

1973

Duke's Big 4 (Pablo)
Collages
Third Sacred Concert
Duke Ellington & Teresa Brewer: It Don't Mean A Thing If It Ain't Got That Swing (Columbia)
”Rugged Jungle” (Lost Secret Records)

1974

”Eastbourne”

Box Sets

The Centennial Edition: The Complete RCA-Victor Recordings (1999) (24 discs)
Complete Works: 1924-1947 (Proper UK) (2003) (40 discs)
The Complete Capitol Recordings (Blue Note) (1999) (5 discs)
The Duke Box (Storyville) (2007) (8 discs) 
1936-40 Small Group Sessions (Mosaic, 7 discs)
Early Ellington: The Complete Brunswick And Vocalion Recordings Of Duke Ellington, 1926-1931
The Private Collection (1956-1971) (Saja) (10 discs)
”The Reprise Studio Recordings” (Mosaic) (5 discs)

Ellington's 78-rpm recordings from 1924 to 1926, can be found on countless CDs, but often with very bad sound quality. The Centennial Edition, The Complete Brunswick And Vocalion Recordings and the Small Group Sessions stand out, being the most complete sets with far superior sound, often drawn from masters and mint condition records. Most of the remaining 78-rpm recordings for labels such as Okeh and Pathe, can be found on the French Classics series and the Complete Works: 1924-1947 box set.

Other

Duke Ellington's Incidental Music for Shakespeare's Play Timon of Athens, adapted by Stanley Silverman (1993). Ellington does not perform on this recording, but it includes previously unreleased compositions.

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