Friday, 6 September 2024

The Essence of Prudente



Vince Prudente has worked with some of the biggest names in popular music – Tony Bennett, Ella Fitzgerald, Sarah Vaughn, Lionel Hampton, Woody Herman. No name is bigger than Duke Ellington, who the trombonist and author of this book calls, “My mentor, my encourager, my boss, my accompanist, my confidant, my friend”.

Prudente worked with Duke Ellington during the last two years of the composer’s life. It is a period in Ellington’s career that is unjustly overlooked comprising as it does some of his most powerful and personal music, informed by Ellington being at a stage in his life when he was exercised by thoughts of his mortality, negotiating with eternity as it were. 

The fact that the life and the work were essentially the same thing for Ellington is the mark of a true artist and is the essence of this book. It is evident from his writing here, that this fusing of the life and the work is true also of Vince Prudente. Advised by his therapist to start a journal and to try to write something every day, The Essence and Duke Ellington is the result. Whilst an autobiographical outline can be descried within its pages, the book is much more than that.  It is the distillation of the wisdom accrued over the course of a lifetime as a professional musician, rich in experience, on and off the road. It is a celebration of family, friends and colleagues along the way and also a voyage of discovery, every challenge, every frustration, presenting the opportunity to learn and grow. Vince Prudente has created nothing less than a parable on a life lived well, told with humility; courage, honesty and integrity evident on every page.

The book is available at...







Wednesday, 4 September 2024

Social Media Significance










Ellington Live
has a seat on the committee of the Duke Ellington Society UK and contribute as much as we can to the Society's social media profile.

As such, here is a handy 'cut out and keep' guide to the various "ways and conditions" it is possible to interact with the Society via social media.

Click on the links below. All these media may be accessed without signing up to join

Chief among these is the Society's Facebook page.





The Society also has accounts with Instagram...


... and Threads


Our newest social account is with Blue Sky...


It is possible to join the discussion at Discord...


There is also a monthly e-newsletter to which readers may subscribe here.
















Monday, 2 September 2024

Live: September 2024

Sunday, 15 September, 16:00 (CET)

Jazz Aux Champs Elysées 2024 Année Duke Ellington

Laurent Mignard Duke Orchestra

au Splendid





In 2003, Laurent Mignard founded the Duke Orchestra to recreate the Duke Ellington Sacred Concert in Saint Sulpice, then the Far East Suite in Beirut. The Duke Orchestra and its dream team of soloists gradually established themselves as the best Ellingtonian orchestra in activity (according to the Duke Ellington Music Society), to project the legacy in concerts and (re)creations on the greatest stages. Composer, Laurent Mignard is inspired by Ellington, Ornette Coleman, Debussy, Dutilleux, Takemitsu ... in search of the balance between serenity and surprise, beyond traditional tonal laws. Laurent Mignard is president of the Maison du Duke.

(Didier Desbois as, Aurélie Tropez as, cl, Olivier Defays ts, Carl ts, fl, Philippe Chagne bs, Claude Egea tp, Sylvain Gontard ou Gilles Relisieux tp, Jérôme Etcheberry tp, Malo Mazurié tp, Nicolas Grymonprez tb, Michaël Ballue tb, Jerry Edwards tb, Philippe Milanta p, Bruno Rousselet b, Julie Saury d, Laurent Mignard dir)

Details here.

Sunday, 15 September 15:00 (EDT)

Ellington Effect Workshop #43: Boy Meets Horn


Join us for the 43rd Zoom webinar in David Berger's Ellington Effect workshop series, which will focus on Ellington's iconic composition Boy Meets Horn. The Ellington Effect workshops are monthly Zoom meetings where David dives into a single composition each time, analyzing it musically line by line, as well as relating pertinent stories about Duke and the band, and answering questions from attendees.  

About Boy Meets Horn

Following previous concertos for his star soloists, Ellington created this masterpiece with and for Rex Stewart. As Ellington explained, he thrived on limitations. In this case, Rex had six effective notes where he could employ his half valve technique. Although Ellington gets full credit for this piece, according to Rex, the two of them worked out his cornet part together, and then Duke scored it for the band.

This was not the first concerto Ellington wrote for Rex. Trumpet In Spades was written in 1943. It featured Rex’s technique at a very fast tempo. Successive concertos for Barney Bigard (Clarinet Lament), Johnny Hodges (unrecorded Concerto For Johnny), Lawrence Brown (Yearning For Love), and Cootie Williams (Echoes Of Harlem) preceded Boy Meets Horn. Later concertos include Concerto For Cootie (Williams), Golden Cress and Blue Cellophane (Lawrence Brown), Air Conditioned Jungle and Silk Lace (Jimmy Hamilton).

Ellington was a master at recognizing his players’ strengths and idiosyncrasies and capitalizing on them. Rex Stewart’s expressive use of half valve effects was a big part of his musical personality and set him off from other trumpet and cornet players. Louis Armstrong popularized half valve techniques like falloffs and glisses. Cootie Williams adopted those techniques and added scoops and bends, but Rex took it to another level. In Boy Meets Horn, originally entitled Twits and Twerps, successive, humorous half valve non-pitches characterize the a theme of the concerto.

As with all great concertos, the entirety of the ensemble is integral to the composition and not mere accompaniment. What could be sheer buffoonery in another arranger’s hands becomes comic genius with Ellington. Surprisingly, other bands arranged and played Boy Meets Horn, most notably Benny Goodman featuring Chris Griffin.

Tickets available here. Annual membership available here.

Wednesday, 25 September, 18:00 (BST)

Duke Ellington Society UK Social via Zoom


This is a private event for members of Duke Ellington Society UK and subscribers to their email newsletter.


Monday, 12 August 2024

Full Phil

 

Vanderbilt University has recently begun to put its collection of audio/visual material from Phil Schaap's broadcasts on line. The collection may be accessed from the 

From the collection, here are those broadcasts uploaded so far from the Duke Ellington Birthday series.

29 April 2010


Phil celebrates the legacy and innovations of the legendary Duke Ellington with a selection of early 78s and songs from the career-reviving 1956 Newport concert.

29 April 2011


 

30 April 2011 (Ctd)



2 May 2011




4 May 2011




As an extension of Ellington’s birthday broadcast, Phil uses this episode of Out to Lunch to spotlight Ellington’s performances at Carnegie Hall in the 1940s, as well as their role in racial activism and early black power movements.

29 April 2012


All Star Dates 3 April 1961 to 26 September 1962


29 April 2017

 

For this edition of the annual Duke Ellington Birthday Broadcast, Phil presents the late 1930s and early 1940s recordings with a focus on the contributions of Billy Strayhorn, Jimmie Blanton and Ben Webster.


29 April 2018


On this edition of the annual Birthday Broadcast, Phil explores Ellington's attempts throughout his career to control the production of his own recordings.


29 April 2019


Phil hosts a set of Duke's Columbia Records material from 1947 to 1952.


10 May 2019

Phil celebrates the 101st birthday of pioneering but short-lived bassist Jimmie Blanton with a selection of his rare recordings with and away from Duke Ellington.

Thursday, 1 August 2024

Going, going, going...

Ellington Live frequents eBay on a regular basis because frequently for sale is all sorts of interesting memorabilia which conjours times and places in Ellington's career.

Here is a round up of some recent lots...

DUKE ELLINGTON Recording Session 1952 VTG Original "PoPsie" Photo IMPORTANT JAZZ




According to the vendor, "William "PoPsie" Randolph (May 15, 1920 - January 21, 1978) was an American photographer known worldwide for his success in documenting the birth of modern jazz, R&B and rock and roll.  His career began as a member of Benny Goodman's orchestra."


1950 DUKE ELLINGTON PROGRAM HEIDELBERG SONNY GREER RARE GERMAN LANGUAGE













BILLBOARD "Fall Special" 9/5/31 DUKE ELLINGTON, Russ Columbo, STREET SCENE 183pp



From the vendor's description...

Intact copy of the September 5, 1931 "FALL SPECIAL spectacular  edition of THE BILLBOARD theater / music industry magazine - Vaudeville, Burlesque, Fairs, Circus, legit theater  great weekly column by  photos , blurbs -  great full page advert for DUKE ELLINGTON, cool advert for  CHIEL SHUNATONA (American) INDIAN jazz band! "Eleven hot fast furious redskins!" ..so much more - huge 183 page issue - if you want to learn about the entertainment industry back then READ THE TRADES! It's ALL here!

1930s DUKE ELLINGTON Autograph~Jazz~Big Band~SIGNED w/ "LOVE"~Newspaper Ad Promo



From the vendor...

Original vintage 1930s promotional advertisement for ~ or from a newspaper article about ~ Duke Ellington & "THE HOTTEST BAND IN THE WORLD" 

AUTOGRAPHED by Ellington with LOVE 

Good overall condition; mounted by a previous owner on lightweight board that has largely protected this from wear and damage over the years ~ about 8" x 9.5"

And from Latin America...

RARE 1960’s DUKE ELLINGTON Jazz Magazine Argentina

































Wednesday, 17 July 2024

Live: August 2024

It is advisable to book any event listed here in advance when possible and check with the promoter/ organiser to ensure any performance is going ahead as planned before travelling.

Thursday, 15 Aug 2024, 19:30 (BST),  Royal Albert Hall, London

BBC Proms 2024

Prom 35: Ellington, Braxton and Mary Lou Williams



Seats from £10 to £44 (plus booking fee)

Booking Fee Information

Book Tickets

Ilan Volkov and friends celebrate milestones from the past 100 years of American jazz, starting with a sequence honouring the ‘Duke’. Mary Lou WilliamsZodiac Suite from 1945 romps between boogie-woogie and dissonance in its response to astrological signs.

The evening culminates in the work of a boundary-crossing visionary very much still with us. From the south side of Chicago, multi-instrumentalist and self-styled ‘trans-idiomatic composer’ Anthony Braxton has established himself as a musician whose imagination recognises no bounds.

Broadcast live on BBC Radio 3.

Programme

Ellington, arr. M. Gould Solitude; Mood Indigo; Sophisticated Lady; Caravan 13

Mary Lou Williams Zodiac Suite 40’ (European premiere)

Interval

Anthony Braxton Composition No. 27 (+46, 59, 63, 147, 151, LM) c30’

Anthony Braxton saxophone

James Fei saxophone/conductor

Katherine Young bassoon/conductor

Chris Lewis saxophone/clarinet

Brandon Lee trumpet

Mikaela Bennett soprano

Aaron Diehl Trio

BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra

Ilan Volkov conductor


Sunday, 18 August 15:00 (EDT)

Such Sweet Thunder workshop with David Berger: Cottontail

Cottontail

By 1940, the black big bands all focused on The Blues and Rhythm (contrafaxes on the chord changes of I Got Rhythm) almost to the exclusion of everything else. When smaller jump bands like Louis Jordan and his Tympany Five gained popularity in the 1940s, they coined the phrase Rhythm and Blues, and it stuck.

Not to be outdone, Ellington recorded Cottontail in 1940. The fast tempo, angular lines, and sophisticated chord substitutions in addition to Ben Webster’s powerful tenor solo laid down the swing gauntlet and forecasted much of where bebop would be going in a few years. Every jazz player (including Charlie Parker) took note of this recording. Tenor players committed Ben’s solo to memory.

After a couple of short stints with the band in the mid- to late ‘30s, Ben Webster became a full-time member in January, 1940. His presence was immediately felt. He was Ellington’s first great tenor soloist—mostly influenced by Coleman Hawkins, Johnny Hodges, and the blues. He had two nicknames: Frog, and The Brute, the second of which was most fitting to his volatile personality, especially when under the influence of alcohol.

His dream was to play with Ellington and sit next to Johnny Hodges. Although Webster was a tough guy, he had his tender, romantic side, which he sought to develop through internalizing Hodges’ style. However, the two could not have been more different. Hodges was quiet and Ben was outspoken to a fault. Hodges was an ear player, and Ben, who had perfect pitch, also played excellent stride piano and was well-versed in chromatic harmony.

His sound and harmonic creativity owed much to Hawkins, but Ben’s connection to the Blues prevented him from losing his earthiness. When bebop took hold in the mid-40s, he was upset that he couldn’t make the transition. His big sound, vibrato, and eighth note feel were too ingrained.

Cottontail (originally entitled Shuckin’ And Stiffin’) is a collaboration between Ellington and Webster. Ben wrote the melody of the head and sax soli, and Duke scored the rest. Ellington was in the habit of paying his sidemen $75 for their ideas and then taking sole credit for the composition. Such is the case here.

During Ben’s first stint with Ellington (1940-43), he was best friends with trumpeter Jimmy Maxwell, who at that time was playing lead trumpet with Benny Goodman. I never got to know Ben, as he moved to Europe before I came on the New York jazz scene in 1971, so besides recordings, my knowledge of Ben came from anecdotes Maxwell told me while I studied trumpet with him.

According to Maxwell, Duke wrote the arrangement of Ben’s line and let Ben know that they would record it. The night before the recording, Ben devised an amazing 2-chorus solo that he would play on the recording. Not wanting anyone to know that he had prepared this solo, he planned to unleash it on the second take, figuring that there would be some mistakes on the first take, and Duke would issue the second take.

So, for the first take, Ben improvised a completely different solo. He was very relaxed—figuring that no one would get to hear what he was playing. At the end of the take, Duke was satisfied and told the band to take out Never No Lament. Ben begged Duke for another take so he could play his amazing, prepared solo, but Duke liked the first take.

Ben’s solo on that take went on to be one of the four cornerstones of the tenor sax along with Coleman Hawkins’ Body And Soul, Lester Young’s Lester Leaps In, and Illinois Jacquet’s Flying Home. Thanks to Ellington, we’ll never know the amazing, prepared solo of Ben’s.

This is the story passed down for ages, but the fact is that the band did record a second take, which has was noted in Victor’s files but the recording has not surfaced. Evidently, Ben got to play his amazing, prepared solo, but Duke chose the first take—recognizing the spontaneity of the moment.

Beside Ben’s solo, his sax soli set the standard for all sax solis to come. Ben’s lead line, Duke’s harmonies, and the sax section’s performance were all a revelation. Although Otto Hardwick was the lead alto player in the band, Ellington would occasionally assign the lead to Johnny Hodges for hard-swinging passages. Such was the case here. When Hardwick left the band in 1946, Hodges took over the lead chair.

Special mention also goes to the rhythm section. Jimmie Blanton’s propulsive beat lights a fire under Sonny Greer and Ellington. The change in the title to Cottontail was in tribute to Ben’s idol and section mate, Johnny Hodges, whose nickname was Rabbit, probably due to his physically small stature. All of Ellington’s scores and parts for Hodges were labeled “Rab”.

When soloists would leave the band, Duke would retire the arrangements they soloed on. However, this was not the case with Cottontail. After passing through a few hands and then Ben on his brief return in the late 1940s, it became a permanent feature for Paul Gonsalves for decades. Paul would play Ben’s first four bars and then improvise his own solo. When performing with Ella Fitzgerald in the 1960s, Ella would scat the head and then several choruses—making it her feature.

Tickets available here.

Sunday, 25 August 15:00-18:30 (EDT)

Cadieux Café, 4300 Cadieux Rd, Detroit, MI 48224, USA

R J Spangler's Planet D Nonet

Blues To Be There Vinyl Launch Party


Details here.


Thursday, 11 July 2024

It's off to work we go...

 We have looked previously at Duke Ellington's proposed idea for a musical called Coal Black and the Seven Dwarfs. Two lyric sheets alleged to be from the planning for the production were listed recently on eBay.

The first is the lyric for the song I Could Get A Man which Ellington and the Orchestra recorded with vocalist Dolores Parker for Columbia Records on 22 December 1947. A comparison of that recording with the lyric sheet shown below demonstrates that not all the lines made the cut...














THIS IS A Vintage ORIGINAL 1940s Ers HAND WRITTEN SONG LYRICS from T HEE & BILL COTTRELL to the DUKE ELLINGTON Musical Called COLE BLACK AND THE SEVEN DWARFS


Thornton Hee (March 26, 1911 – October 30, 1988) was an American animator, director, and teacher. 

He taught character design and caricature.

T. Hee was hired by the Leon Schlesinger Studio as a character designer in 1935, and got to work overtime creating Hollywood star caricatures in The Coo Coo Nut Grove, directed by Friz Freleng.

Another T. Hee caricature-packed Merrie Melodie, The Woods Are Full Of Cuckoos, directed by Frank Tashlin, is a spoof of then-popular radio shows Community Sing, Allen's Alley (a.k.a. The Fred Allen Show and Al Pearce & His Gang.

It's likely Walt Disney saw these Merrie Melodies, as he hired T. Hee, who subsequently worked on Mother Goose Goes Hollywood, the 1938 Silly Symphony designed and intended as the last word in movie star caricatures.

Hee joined Walt Disney Animation Studios around 1937. 

T. Hee was one of the storyboard artists who contributed The Reluctant Dragon segment from the 1941 film of the same name.

He is most recognized for directing the Dance of the Hours segment of Fantasia. 

He left after the strike, but returned to work there twice, from 1940 to 1946, and again from 1958 to 1961.

Where T worked between his last 1940's stint for Disney and his joining UPA and the crew of director Robert "Bobe" Cannon is one of the many mysteries I found putting today's post together. 

An informative Cartoon Research post noted his work at UPA on the animated titles for the Life Of Riley TV show.

Hee also worked for United Productions of America (1951 to 1958) and Terrytoons (1961 to 1963).

Now where T worked between leaving Disney in 1946 and joining UPA is one of many questions about his career I could not answer.

It would appear that T had the task of injecting comedy into the Jolly Frolics cartoons of director Bobe Cannon. 

Bobe worked for Chuck Jones at Warner Bros. and Tex Avery at MGM but, as a director at UPA, absolutely abhorred conflict and anything that could remotely resemble slapstick. 

That made things a bit of a challenge for the UPA story department. 

The Bobe Cannon cartoons enjoyable and charming, but not exactly laugh riots. 

That's okay - laughs aplenty mark John Hubley's brilliant work at UPA, and later, the Mr. Magoos directed by Pete Burness.

Hee was one of the co-founders, with Jack Hannah, of the Character Animation program at the California Institute of the Arts. 

He later served as chairman of the Film Arts Department.

T Hee provided the illustrations during the opening credits of The Life of Riley television show of the 1950s.

T. Hee was born on 26 March 1911 in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, USA. He was a writer, known for Pinocchio (1940), Variety Girl (1947) and The Parent Trap (1961). 

He was married to Patti Price. 

He died on 30 October 1988 in Carbon County, Montana, USA.

 T. Hee founded, with Jack Hannah, the Character Animation program at the California Institute of the Arts, where he would be chairman of the Film Arts Department. 

He ended up contributing to the next generations of animators - from John Lasseter to Tim Burton to the late Joe Ranft - with his teaching at CalArts.

T HEE:

Born.    March 26, 1911
Died.      October 30, 1988

FULL Page is about 8 x 11

ORIGINAL VINTAGE Item in VINTAGE FAIR / GOOD  CONDITION 

Please see photos

The second item up for auction is a typed sheet of the lyrics for the song  Sweet Velvet O'Toole.

Interesting to note that the possibility of a production of Cole Black/ Satin Doll and the Seven Little Men was still being mooted as late as 1990...