Duke Ellington - The Chronological Classics: 1946 (1998)

  • 26 May, 01:15
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Artist:
Title: The Chronological Classics: 1946
Year Of Release: 1998
Label: Classics [1015]
Genre: Jazz, Swing
Quality: FLAC (tracks + .cue,log,scans)
Total Time: 75:13
Total Size: 202 MB(+3%)
WebSite:

Tracklist

01. Indiana (2:48)
02. Blue Is the Light (3:05)
03. Lover Man (3:20)
04. Just You, Just Me (2:53)
05. Beale Street Blues (2:54)
06. My Honey's Lovin' Arms (3:10)
07. Memphis Blues (3:02)
08. I Don't Stand a Ghost of a Chance with You (3:02)
09. St. Louis Blues (2:59)
10. Swamp Fire (2:52)
11. Royal Garden Blues (3:08)
12. Esquire Swank (3:33)
13. Midriff (3:18)
14. Diminuendo in Blue (2:47)
15. Magenta Haze (2:58)
16. The Golden Cress (5:13)
17. Sultry Sunset (4:07)
18. Deep South Suite - Part 1 (Magnolia's Dripping with Molasses) (6:23)
19. Deep South Suite - Part 2 (Hearsay or Orson Wells) (4:43)
20. Deep South Suite - Part 3 (Nobody Was Lookin') (2:55)
21. Deep South Suite - Part 4 (Happy Go Lucky Local) (6:03)

For the casual listener, "best of" collections are a good way to explore Duke Ellington's legacy. But if you're a serious collector or a completist, it's important to be aware of Classics, a French label that put out more than 30 CDs of the Duke's work in the 1990s. Regrettably, Classics generally skipped alternate takes; but even so, it was nice to see a label reissuing Ellington's master takes chronologically. This rewarding CD focuses on Ellington's recordings of 1946, when his orchestra boasted such heavyweights as trumpeter Cat Anderson, alto saxophonist Johnny Hodges, tenor saxman Al Sears, baritone saxman Harry Carney, trombonist Lawrence Brown, and drummer Sonny Greer. It was in 1946 that the Duke recorded his last two sessions for RCA Victor, and this CD spotlights those two sessions before offering two pieces from an October 23 session for Musicraft ("Magenta Haze" and "Diminuendo in Blue") and several V-disc recordings from a November 23 concert at Carnegie Hall in New York, where Ellington's orchestra performed "The Golden Cress" and "Sultry Sunset" as well as the interesting, four-part "Deep South Suite." The suite's fourth part is the well-known "Happy Go Lucky Local," an infectious blues track that became the basis for Jimmy Forrest's 1951 smash "Night Train" (which was speeded up and covered by the Godfather of Soul James Brown in the early 1960s). Most of the material on 1946 is instrumental, although Ellington features singer Marion Cox on pleasing arrangements of "St. Louis Blues" and "Lover Man," and fares equally well with singer Kay Davis on "I Don't Stand a Ghost of a Chance With You." While 1946 falls short of essential, the selections are definitely rewarding and prove that the late 1940s was a creatively successful, if underrated, period for the Duke.~Scott Yanow



  • Grich
  •  15:25
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this one was missing i think so..thanks !!
  • mufty77
  •  23:46
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Many thanks.