Monday, 27 June 2022

Live: July 2022

 


Friday 8 July, 20:00

The Simon Spillett Big Band plays the music of Tubby Hayes

The Wigan Jazz Festival, Wigan, Lancashire

Mark Armstrong, Bruce Adams, Nathan Bray, Steve Fishwick (trumpets); Mark Nightingale, Andy Flaxman, Ian Bateman, Pete North (trombones); Sammy Mayne, Pete Long, Robert Fowler, Karen Sharp, Alan Barnes (saxes); Rob Barron (piano); Alec Dankworth (bass); Pete Cater (drums)

Sunday 10 July, 20:15

The Simon Spillett Big Band plays the music of Tubby Hayes

The Swanage Jazz Festival, Swanage, Dorset

Mark Armstrong, Nathan Bray, Freddie Gavita, George Hogg (trumpets); Mark Nightingale, Andy Flaxman, Ian Bateman, Pete North (trombones); Sammy Mayne, Pete Long, Alex Garnett, Simon Allen, Alan Barnes (saxes); Rob Barron (piano); Alec Dankworth (bass); Pete Cater (drums)


Saturday, 30 July


Vocalist Candice Hoyes and Pianist Damien Sneed Present Duke Ellington's On a Turquoise Cloud at Caramoor on July 30

Presented in collaboration with Jazz at Lincoln Center for their Summer Jazz Festival, Caramoor will host the duo as they celebrate the 75th anniversary of Duke Ellington's On a Turquoise Cloud.

"She has a powerhouse of a voice that will easily sweep you off your feet and has captured audiences at Lincoln Center, international music festivals and even New York Fashion Week," - Rikki Byrd, Repeller

Vocalist and archival scholar Candice Hoyes and composer, conductor and pianist Damien Sneed are thrilled to perform the incomparable works of jazz icon Duke Ellington at the upcoming Summer Jazz Festival at Caramoor on July 30. The prolific duo presents Duke Ellington's On A Turquoise Cloud, a suite of high-flying, lyrical Ellington works that remain as innovative today as they were in Ellington's time. The pair appears at Caramoor in collaboration with Jazz at Lincoln Center on July 30. The music for the day begins at 1pm on multiple stages, with Candice and Damien expected to take the Spanish Courtyard stage in mid-afternoon. More information on this outdoor festival and tickets can be found here.

UWIS - Sweet!

Duke Ellington UW–Madison Residency 50th Anniversary Celebration

June 17, 2022

Concert and Panel Discussion: Duke Ellington UW Residency 50th Anniversary Celebration
Free and Open to the Public
Friday, June 17, 2022
5:30-10:30pm
Hamel Music Center, UW–Madison, 740 University Ave

Talk: “Duke and Paul” by Patricia Willard
Free and Open to the Public
Sunday, June 19, 2022
1:30-2:30pm
Memorial Union Play Circle, 800 Langdon St.

These two events are in celebration of the 50th Anniversary of Duke Ellington’s 1972 UW–Madison Residency, and are part of the 2022 Madison Jazz Festival, presented by Arts + Literature Laboratory and Wisconsin Union Theater. We aren’t among the sponsors, but we want to acknowledge the significance of both the residency and this celebration. UW–Madison’s School of Music hosted Duke Ellington and his orchestra for its Duke Ellington Festival, also billed as “Duke Ellington Week,” which included five days of concerts, workshops and masterclasses in what would be the longest university residency of Ellington’s career. 

June 17 Concert and Panel Discussion Schedule:
5:30pm: Sun Prairie and Middleton High School Jazz Bands perform Duke’s music with Guest Artist Victor Goines
7:00pm: Panel Discussion with Emeritus Professor Jim Latimer (organizer of the 1972 Ellington Residency), award-winning jazz journalist and former Ellington publicist Patricia Willard, and former Ellington vocalist and current Madison resident Jane Coyne
8:30pm: Concert of Duke Ellington’s music, including The Uwis Suite (composed for the 1972 residency), performed by the UW-Madison Jazz Faculty and Alumni Band

Personnel list for The Uwis Suite, by Duke Ellington, from the liner notes of The Ellington Suites
Personnel list for The Uwis Suite, by Duke Ellington, from the liner notes of The Ellington Suites, released by Pablo Records in 1976. [Mills Call Number: Jazz Pablo 2310-762]

June 19 Talk Details:
1:30pm: Jazz journalist, historian, and former Ellington publicist Patricia Willard will share her first-person account of Duke Ellington and his Orchestra being at UW–Madison 50 years ago. She was here for the residency as a student and as a journalist for DownBeat.

The June 17 Panel Discussion is a reprise of sorts of the Panel Talk the Mead Witter School of Music presented in April, when Lecturer of Ethnomusicology Luci Mok hosted Emeritus Professor of Music James Latimer and Jane Coyne to reminisce on the 50th anniversary of the 1972 Duke Ellington UW–Madison residency. Having Patricia Willard on hand promises to enhance the memories being shared! 

Speaking of Patricia Willard’s memories, she published an account of the Duke Ellington Festival, along with photos she took, in the October 12, 1972 issue of DownBeat under the title “Love and Learn: The Ellingtonians at UW.” We have the issue in our holdings, but it’s not available online via any of the full-text databases to which we subscribe.

First page of "Love and Learn: The Ellingtonians at UW," text and photos by Patricia Willard. DownBeat, Oct 12, 1972, Vol. 39, p12.
First page of “Love and Learn: The Ellingtonians at UW,” text and photos by Patricia Willard. DownBeat, Oct 12, 1972, Vol. 39, p12. [Mills Call Number: ML1 D748]

We look forward to new memories being made as old ones are shared and Duke Ellington’s music is performed! 

(Source)

1972 Festival program cover image is a black & white print of Duke Ellington, a Black man, portrayed in profile from the right side and shoulder up, against a solid black background with the words "duke ellington festival" in lowercase aligned vertically on right side
1972 Duke Ellington Festival program cover, from Mills Music Library collection of School of Music Programme




DUKE ELLINGTON UW RESIDENCY 50TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION

Location: Hamel Music Center Date: June 17th, 2022 Time: 5:30-10:00pm Admission: FREE


What's Going On?

UW’s Mead Witter School of Music celebrates the golden anniversary of Duke Ellington’s five-day residency in July 1972. The event schedule includes 5:30pm: Sun Prairie and Middleton High School Jazz Bands perform Duke’s music with Guest Artist Victor Goines; 7:00pm: Panel Discussion with Emeritus Professor Jim Latimer(organizer of the 1972 Ellington residency), award-winning jazz journalist and former Ellington publicist Patricia Willard, and former Ellington vocalist and current Madison resident Jane Coyne; 8:30pm: Concert of Duke Ellington's music, including his “UWIS Suite” (composed for the 1972 residency), performed by the UW-Madison Jazz Faculty and Alumni Band (confirmed musicians include saxophonists Les Thimmig, Anders Svanoe, Nick Berkhout, Alex Charland, and Zach Ramirez; trumpeters Dave Cooper, Dan Cross, and Nate Schmidt; trombonists Nat McIntosh, Tom Kelley, and Cole Bartels; pianist Johannes Wallmann; bassist Peter Dominguez; drummer Matt Endres; and special guest vocalist Jane Coyne.

Event Schedule:
5:30pm: Sun Prairie and Middleton High School Jazz Bands with Victor Goines
7:00pm: Panel Discussion with Jim Latimer, Patricia Willard, & Jane Coyne
8:30pm: Duke Ellington's UWIS Suite performed by the UW-Madison Jazz Faculty and Alumni Band

(Source)


"DUKE AND PAUL" BY PATRICIA WILLARD

Location: UW Memorial Union Play Circle, 800 Langdon St.  Date: June 19th, 2022 Time: 1:30-2:30pm Admission: FREE



What's Going On?

Patricia Willard will present "Duke and Paul" on Sunday, June 19, 2022, 1:30 to 2:30 pm in the Memorial Union Play Circle. This event is free and open to the public. Jazz historian Patricia Willard will share first-person account of Duke Ellington and his orchestra at UW-Madison 50 years ago, while a student as well as a journalist for Downbeat. Reflecting on Duke's week in residence, the hour will conclude with video of Duke and Paul Gonsalves performing "Happy Reunion" in Mills Hall on July 21, 1972.

Patricia Willard is a writer, historian, photojournalist, concert producer, archivist and research consultant who, for more than 25 years was associated with Duke Ellington as editor, researcher and West Coast public relations counsel. In July 1972, she independently registered as a student for the University of Wisconsin Duke Ellington Festival and covered the week-long event for Downbeat magazine. She holds one semester unit of University of Wisconsin undergraduate credit in Duke Ellington. Ms. Willard has served as Historical Consultant to the Duke Ellington Collection at the Smithsonian Institution Museum of American History, Consultant in Jazz and Popular Music at the Library of Congress and has conducted jazz oral histories for these institutions as well as for the National Endowment for the Arts Jazz Oral History Program. She currently is completing a book on Ellington's last quarter century and his continuing impact on music internationally.

(Source)


And here are the details of the earlier UWIS panel from earlier this year...


Panel Talk: Duke Ellington’s 1972 UW–Madison Residency

April 13, 2022

Panel Talk: Duke Ellington’s 1972 UW–Madison Residency
Free and Open to the Public
Friday, April 15, 2022
10:00-11:30am
Collins Recital Hall, Hamel Music Center, UW–Madison, 740 University Ave

We are pleased to shine a light on this event presented by the Mead Witter School of Music! Lecturer of Ethnomusicology Luci Mok will host Emeritus Professor of Music James Latimer and Jane Coyne to reminisce on the 50th anniversary of the 1972 Duke Ellington UW–Madison residency.

Fifty years ago this summer, in July 1972, UW–Madison’s School of Music hosted Duke Ellington and his orchestra for its Duke Ellington Festival, also billed as “Duke Ellington Week,” which included five days of concerts, workshops and masterclasses in what would be the longest university residency of Ellington’s career.

The impetus for the 1972 festival came from a conversation with the School of Music’s Percussion Professor, Jim Latimer, while Duke was on campus in 1971 to receive an honorary doctorate. Professor Latimer went on to organize and chair the festival, which turned out to be the most extensive and intensive campus residency of Duke’s storied career. 

A list of names of the Ellington Festival Committee for the Duke Ellington Festival, UW-Madison, July 1972
Ellington Festival Committee, Jim Latimer, Chairman. From Duke Ellington Festival program, Mills Music Library

Highlights from the festival included a complete performance of Duke’s Second Sacred Concert that included an 81-member community choir drawn from 21 local churches, a “Family Day” concert at Camp Randall Stadium that drew an audience of over 6,000, and the premiere performance of Duke’s The Uwis Suite, composed especially for the occasion.

Jane Coyne was a voice student at UW–Madison who participated in Ellington’s workshops during the residency and sang in the Ellington Festival Chorus. Following the residency, she was invited to tour and perform with Ellington’s Orchestra throughout his last year of performances. 

Ellington Festival Chorus names, including Jane Coyne, from Duke Ellington Festival program, UW-Madison July 1972
Ellington Festival Chorus names, including Jane Coyne, from Duke Ellington Festival program, Mills Music Library

We have been communicating with Luci Mok, Professor of Double Bass and Jazz Peter Dominguez, and John and Carolyn Peterson Chair in Jazz Studies, Director of Jazz Studies & Professor of Music Johannes Wallmann throughout this academic year regarding plans to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Duke Ellington Festival. We have shared various materials, including a scan of the festival program (see cover image and excerpts above) and recordings from the festival we have in our Ken Ohst Collection, a collection on 181 reels of jazz music and interviews from Ken Ohst, long-time jazz announcer and producer at WHA Radio. 

We also shared the Oral History Program interview with Jim Latimer, which was conducted by Roxanne Reed in 1994. Special thanks to Troy Reeves, Head of the Oral History Program at University Archives, for making the recording available. Tom Caw, Music Public Services Librarian, met with Luci Mok’s Music 497: Jazz in America class this semester to teach the students how to conduct research into the residency making use of resources we have here physically and access to online for an assignment. Johannes Wallmann has a performance of The Uwis Suite planned for the Madison Jazz Festival in June, along with other forms of acknowledging and celebrating the anniversary. We’ll share more information about that as we get it!

(Source)

Saturday, 11 June 2022

Far East - Sweet!

Here is a wonderful video of two sets played on Ellington's birthday this year by the FEEL (Far East Ellington Lovers) Jazz Orchestra.

The Orchestra's leader is Yoshia Inoue. As well as being a musician and bandleader, Yoshia is also determined to follow in the footsteps of the late Japanese Ellington collectors Mr Sigawa and Mr Shibata by re-establishing the Duke Ellington Society of Japan. Yoshia says "many precious episodes and records are disappearing. So I want to find and gather footprints of Ellington in Japan and enjoy them with Ellington lovers of all over the world!"

We'll certainly give Mr Inoue all the support we can and will report future developments...







Saturday, 21 May 2022

Live: June 2022

Friday, 3 June 2022

The Queen's Suite, The Nu Civilisation Orchestra, The Queen Elizabeth Hall, London



The Nu Civilisation Orchestra will perform Ellington’s The Queen’s Suite at The Queen Elizabeth Hall on 3 June, 2022.

The piece was inspired by Ellington’s meeting with HRH in 1958. He composed a suite in celebration of the day and, to make it extra special, had it pressed as a single disc, which he presented to the Palace.


The Nu Civilisation Orchestra, led by MD Peter Edwards, will perform the suite and a new piece by the leader, with Gary Crosby joining them on stage on bass (the NCO contains several alumni of the Tomorrow’s Warriors programme, which Crosby co-founded, including heavy-hitters such as Rosie Turton, Denys Baptiste and Sheila Maurice-Grey). 

 Tickets: www.southbankcentre.co.uk/

Saturday, 4 June, 2022 

Ronnie Scott's Orchestra Present The Jubilee Jazz Jamboree, Ronnie Scott's Jazz Club 47 Frith Street, Soho, London, W1D 4HT


The Ronnie Scott's Jazz Orchestra  present a jubilee special to celebrate the Queen's platinum jubilee.  They will play the rarely heard Queen's Suite plus other regal pieces such as Royal Ellington PartyQueenie Pie, Jubilee Stomp and music from jazz royalty such as Count Basie and Earl Hines.

One of the UK's finest big bands teeming with first-call players and appearing under the Musical Directorship of award winning band leader Peter Long. 

Line-up (TBC): PETER LONG leader 

Trumpets: Nathan Bray, George Hogg, Mark Armstrong, Freddy Gavita

Trombones: Andy Flaxman, Callum Au, Daniel Higham, Mark Frost

Saxophones: Adrian Revell, Kate Ingram, Dave O'Higgins, Chelsea Carmichael, Jessamy Holder

Piano: Rob Barron, Bass-Steve Pearce, Drums-Ed Richardson.

The History Behind the Queen’s Suite: ‘The Queen’s Suite, six songs Duke Ellington and his collaborator Billy Strayhorn composed for Queen Elizabeth II in 1958. Five of the six songs represent different musical landscapes—a grove full of fireflies, or a mockingbird singing at sunset—seen by Ellington in his travels around the world. Several of these, he wrote in his autobiography, represented some of the most moving moments of his life. It is a remarkable artistic achievement, even by the standards of such a prolific composer. But after recording it, he gave to the queen what he claimed was the only copy, refusing to release the album in his lifetime.

In 1958 Ellington made his way to the Leeds Festival for a command performance for the royal family. It was two years into the midcareer renaissance he and his band experienced after the 1956 Newport Jazz Festival, when saxophonist Paul Gonsalves’ seemingly endless choruses on “Diminuendo and Crescendo in Blue” had Newport’s subdued WASPs dancing so hard that the authorities feared a riot. Not long after, Ellington was on the cover of Time. It was also one year after Governor Orval Faubus and the Little Rock Nine, and Louis Armstrong’s interview in which he called Faubus a no-good motherfucker. Big bands had mostly died off by then, victims of inflation, television, the decline of dance halls, and the rise of rock. But Ellington’s persisted.

When he met the queen he seems to have been taken with her. Harvey G. Cohen, in his excellent book Duke Ellington’s America, describes the meeting:

Various reports confirm that they charmed each other. She asked when he first visited her country, and Ellington diplomatically replied, “1933, your Majesty, years before you were born.” She expressed regret concerning her inability to attend his concerts on the tour, at which point, according to Melody Maker, Ellington’s “face puckered into a huge smile.” “In that case, your Majesty, I’d like to write a very special composition for you—a real royal suite.”

A photo of the scene seems to have captured that very smile. Ellington beams, incandescent, perhaps an indication of a special moment in the life of a musician who had played for his share of grandees. In an interview some years later, he said, “I told her that she was so inspiring and that something musical would surely come of it. She said she would be listening, so I wrote an album for her.”

Shortly thereafter, he set himself (and Strayhorn, who composed “Northern Lights,” one of the songs from the suite) to writing. In early 1959 he took his compositions to the band, which turned in an impressive performance—better than average for the period. According to Gary Marmorstein, author of The Label: The Story of Columbia Records, “a master was prepared, a gold disc issued privately to the royal family—according to an agreement between Ellington and his producer, Irving Townsend—with Ellington retaining rights to release the entire Suite at a later date. Eventually Ellington reimbursed Columbia $2,500 in production costs to buy it back.” Jazz historian Gary Giddins has written that probably no one outside Ellington’s inner circle knew of The Queen’s Suite until two years after his death in 1974. It was released posthumously by Norman Granz. In 1976 it won a Grammy, along with two other suites.

Even for Ellington, this was unusual behavior. He was famous for constantly writing and recording music—it’s estimated he wrote anywhere between two thousand and five thousand pieces—and he kept a stockpile of unreleased recordings (many from the last decade of his life) so large that it dwarfed the output of many major artists. Much of the unreleased material was variously made up of experiments in new styles and general overflow, music that record labels wouldn’t take a chance on, whether because he had simply published too much or the work was deemed too artistically ambitious. Yet The Queen’s Suite seems to have been different. Though the album was never released in his lifetime, he did perform selections from it in concerts, and one of its songs, The Single Petal of a Rose, was widely requested. The connection to the queen likely would have made the album quite marketable. Ellington himself even seems to have had a particular personal investment in the work. According to Townsend, the composer worked harder on the piece than anything else he’d ever seen.’

From Secret Music  on Duke Ellington’s The Queen’s Suite by Christopher Carroll https://www.laphamsquarterly.org/music/secret-music

Book tickets here.


Tuesday,  June 7 2023

Harlem, The Carlton House Club, Olney MK46 4BB




Friday, 10 June, Saturday 11 June 2022

Jazz At Lincoln Centre The Best of Duke Ellington
Rose Theatre, New York

WHAT TO EXPECT

  • A sampling of Duke Ellington’s extensive songbook

  • Music that uplifts, enlightens, and rewards everyone from first-time listeners to lifelong fans

  • There will be a pre-concert lecture at 7pm for each performance.

ABOUT THE CONCERT

The Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis closes the 2021-22 concert season with an audience favorite: an all-Ellington evening of musical masterpieces.

The possibilities are endless in an Ellington extravaganza like this. Over the course of six decades, Duke Ellington wrote well over 1,000 compositions, some of the richest and most enduring music of the past century. From his early days at the Cotton Club when Duke first took the world by storm with hits like “Creole Love Call” and “Black and Tan Fantasy” to his next wave of classics like “It Don’t Mean a Thing (If it Ain’t Got That Swing),” “Mood Indigo,” “Sophisticated Lady,” and “In a Sentimental Mood,” Duke set the standard for concise songs in which every moment makes an impact.

Duke’s conceptual works—including his “Sacred Concerts” series and extended suites like Black, Brown & Beige, The Far East Suite, New Orleans Suite, and Latin American Suite—go even deeper. The music provides the ultimate canvas for a big band—and nobody plays it quite like the JLCO.

This program is presented through the generosity of Mica and Ahmet Ertegun.

Virtual Ticket, On Demand 11 June - 17 June

Book here.

Saturday, 25 June 2022

Frank Griffith Nonet Duke and Billy Songs and Classics,
Music Room, Royal Liverpool Philharmonic


The Frank Griffith Nonet will present a two-hour concert of adapted songs and classic compositions by Duke Ellington and Billy Strayhorn.

American saxist and clarinetist, Frank Griffith, has been resident in the UK since 1996 and his Nonet have performed many Ellington and Strayhorn pieces throughout their career, with appearances at London Jazz Festival, Queen Elizabeth Hall, and Cadogan Hall (celebrating the 100th anniversary of Billy Strayhorn's birth).

Frank has also worked with Sir John Dankworth, Dame Cleo Lane, Mel Torme and Lionel Hampton. Now residing in Liverpool, Frank plays frequently for Parr Street Jazz events, and performed at the 2020 Southport Jazz Festival with vocalist Tina May.

The concert will cover a wide span of Ellington and Strayhorn music from 1932 to 1966, including It Don’t Mean a Thing, Daydream, Satin Doll, Take The A Train, Lush Life and Rhumbop, as well as instrumental classics, such as Raincheck, Sophisticated Lady, It's Glory, Chelsea Bridge, I Let A Song Go Out of My Heart and C Jam Blues.

Details here.

Wednesday, 29 June 2022

Duke Ellington- Music from the Sacred Concerts

The Clark Tracey Orchestra, the Choir of York Minster, St Peter's School Choir & Choral Society, soloists Teuta Koco and Mark Williams, and tap dancer Junior Laniyan                                    

York Minster, 17:30



A spectacular Jazz Eucharist featuring music from Duke Ellington’s ‘Sacred Concerts’ will take place at York Minster on Wednesday 29 June at 5.30pm.

Hosted jointly by York Minster and St Peter’s School, York, the service will mark St Peter’s Day, the Patronal festival of both the cathedral and the school. The Archbishop of York, Stephen Cottrell will preach at the service.

Described by Ellington himself as 'the most important thing I have ever done', the ‘Sacred Concerts’ are a unique blend of jazz and choral classical music, with elements of gospel and the blues. Debuted in 1965 and rarely performed since, the Sacred Concerts feature big band, mixed choir and soloists who combine to produce powerful and evocative melodies celebrating spirituality and the Christian faith. St Peter’s School staged a performance of the Sacred Concerts in 2012.

In the magnificent setting of York Minster’s medieval Nave, the service will feature, the Clark Tracey Orchestra, the Choir of York Minster, St Peter's School Choir & Choral Society, soloists Teuta Koco and Mark Williams, and tap dancer Junior Laniyan.

Commenting on the service, The Revd Canon Victoria Johnson, Precentor at York Minster said: “This is an amazing opportunity to hear the sacred music of Duke Ellington in the context of Christian worship in one of the most magnificent cathedrals in the world. Ellington’s music is powerful and uplifting and is an incredibly fitting way to celebrate the new and vibrant partnership between York Minster and St Peter’s School, York, bringing together hundreds of musicians to lead our prayers and praises.

“This service, is for worshippers, jazz lovers, choral music fans, and anyone who enjoys great music and its potential to lift our spirits heavenward.”

Jeremy Walker, Head Teacher, St Peter’s School, York, said: “I am very excited about the prospect of the Ellington Mass in York Minster. It promises to be a wonderful service, full of joy and a perfect way to mark St Peter’s Day and the bond between School and Minster.”

Details here.




Sunday, 1 May 2022

Live: May 2022


Thursday, 5 May - Saturday, 7 May 2022

Essentially Ellington 2022




From the website:

Join us for the 27th Annual Essentially Ellington High School Jazz Band Competition & Festival, May 5th–7th, 2022! The annual Essentially Ellington  High School Jazz Band Competition & Festival is one of the most innovative jazz education events in the world. 


Each year, high school musicians from across North America travel to New York City to spend three days immersed in workshops, jam sessions, rehearsals, and performances at the “House of Swing,” Frederick P. Rose Hall, home of Jazz at Lincoln Center.

Details here.

This year's finalists...

Beloit Memorial High School (Beloit, WI)

Directed by Chris Behrens 

Bothell High School (Bothell, WA)
Directed by Philip Dean 

Byron Center High School (Byron Center, MI)
Directed by Marc Townley 

Foxboro High School (Foxboro, MA)
Directed by Aaron Bush 

Jazz House Kids (Montclair, NJ)
Directed by Nathan Eklund 

Mount Si High School (Snoqualmie, WA)
Directed by William Leather

New World School of the Arts (Miami, FL)
Directed by Jim Gasior 

Newark Academy (Livingston, NJ)
Directed by Julius Tolentino  

Noblesville High School (Noblesville, IN)
Directed by Bethany Robinson 

Orange County School of the Arts (Santa Ana, CA)
Directed by John Reynolds 

Osceola County School for the Arts (Kissimmee, FL)
Directed by Jason Anderson  

Plano West Senior High School (Plano, TX)
Directed by Preston Pierce

Rio Americano High School (Sacramento, CA)
Directed by Josh Murray 

Roosevelt High School (Seattle, WA)
Directed by Scott Brown 

Triangle Youth Jazz Ensemble (Raleigh, NC)
Directed by Gregg Gelb


Thursday, 12 May, 2022

Laurent Mignard, Duke Orchestra Duke Ladies

Théâtre du Châtelet, Paris



From the website of Théatre du Châtelet...


In 1983, the musical revue Sophisticated Ladies, led by Dee Dee Bridgewater, made a stop at the Châtelet and celebrated Duke Ellington (1899-1974). Twenty years later, Laurent Mignard founded the Duke Orchestra and elevated it to the rank of “best active Ellingtonian orchestra” (according to the Duke Ellington Society).
In his new and ambitious two-volume Duke Ladies recording project, Laurent Mignard pays tribute to the women who inspired the maestro to write some of his most beautiful themes, from the fragrances of the Perfume Suite to orchestral frescoes, not to mention portraits such as Sophisticated Lady and Satin Doll. The Châtelet joins this vibrant tribute with a concert featuring an exceptional cast. From jazz, blues, opera or French song, the Duke Ladies will embody the multiple colors of Ellingtonian art, a rainbow of an evening symbolizing the eternal feminine.

Magistral – Jazz Magazine
Accurate and playful – Le Monde
A rare aesthetic relevance – La Terrasse

Booking details here.