Friday, 27 July 2012
Tuesday, 24 July 2012
Midnight in Paris
Midnight in Paris was the final album Duke
Ellington made under his contract with Columbia Records. Ellington was, reportedly, increasingly
dissatisfied with the company. This particular album, in fact, took six months
to complete – between January and June, 1962. Ellington was simultaneously
working on his Featuring Paul Gonsalves album at Fantasy and squirreling away
recordings in his own private stockpile, too.
It’s easy to look at the somewhat
indifferent cover art, listen to the rather middle-of-the-road content of the
album and conclude that this particular project was the casualty of the
shifting pop market as record companies lost confidence in ‘adult pop’ and went
chasing The Beatles and the new demographic.
But look again. It’s easy to imagine,
rather, twin impulses behind this particular collection.
Firstly, Ellington’s general
dissatisfaction with the way things had turned out over his film project, Paris
Blues. Unlike his previous, much heralded, film score, Anatomy of a Murder,
Ellington’s work on the 1961 motion picture Paris Blues was not celebrated by a
release of the music on album from Ellington’s ‘house’ label. A soundtrack did
appear on MGM. Perhaps it was because of the involvement of Louis Armstrong no
longer signed to the label, an album on Columbia was not possible.
As it is, much of the music from Paris
Blues was not released. The recent album French Touch from Laurent Mignard’s superb Duke Orchestra included some of that unreleased
music.
Perhaps in compensation, a couple of numbers – Wild Man and Battle Royal
– Ellington himself featured on the Columbia album he made with Count Basie and his
Orchestra. Ellington also ensured there was a collaboration with Louis
Armstrong in the studio, too, in the famous couple of albums they recorded for
Roulette. And finally, Midnight in Paris allowed the bandleader to put out an
album on Columbia with a Parisian theme and which included his own compositions
Paris Blues and Guitar Amour.
And the second impulse is Billy Strayhorn.
Any surface artistic frustrations Ellington was feeling were nothing compared
to the deep river of Strayhorn’s love affair with the City of Light. And this
is Billy Strayhorn’s album.
The title track (originally intended for
the Basie album), Under Paris Skies, My Heart Sings (a feature for Joya
Sherrill back in the day), Comme-Ci, Comme-Ca, Speak to Me of Love, I Wish You
Love (Jimmy Hamilton’s clarinet is sublime), River Seine, Petite Waltz and No
Regrets were all arranged by Strayhorn. It is Strayhorn’s touch on piano
through several of the tracks, too. Twelve months earlier, whilst in Paris with
Ellington to work on the score for the film, Billy had recorded an album of his
own compositions at the Barclay Studios in the city. Now, back home in New
York, Strayhorn was the principal architect behind this new Parisian themed collection.
And what pastel shades he created, what a rich and varied tapestry is woven
throughout the thirteen selections.
The album has never been released on
compact disc in the USA – and appeared only fleetingly in a very small print
run in – appropriately enough – France.
Sunday, 22 July 2012
Blues in Paris
Essential reading about Duke Ellington's involvement with Paris can be found in the article Busy Winters by Matthew Asprey which is on the Pop Matters site here.
And for an interesting piece on the making of the 1961 motion picture Paris Blues by Krin Gabbard, his illuminating essay is available as a PDF here.
Thursday, 19 July 2012
A Week in Paris
Pendant mes vacances...
The works outing for Duke's this year
is a week in Paris. The hotel – Pallais de Chaillot - was booked on the strength of it being named for the venue where
Duke Ellington played a concert on 3 April, 1939.
There’s going to be, then, something of a
Gallic theme to the next few postings, exploring the music of the Ellingtonians
in France.
Ellington’s band played the Palais de
Chaillot again when they returned for a tour of continental Europe in 1950.
During the band’s stay in the City of Light, a small group of musicians made a
few sides for the Vogue record label under the leadership of Johnny Hodges.
Sixteen of the sides have been anthologized several times on the Vogue label.
Somewhat more rare is the first session for the label by this small group.
They recorded four sides on that initial
date which took place on April, 14, 1950. The first of the tunes, Saint-Germain des Prés Blues appeared under Harold ‘Shorty’
Baker’s name. The remaining three sides credit Hodges as leader.
The full discographical details for
the session are as follows:
Harold Baker (tp) Quentin Jackson
(tb) Johnny Hodges (as) Don Byas (ts) Raymond Fol (p) Wendell Marshall (b)
Butch Ballard (d)
Paris, April 14, 1950
OSW671 Saint-Germain des Prés Blues
0SW672 Good to the Last Drop 341,
Onyx ORI216
0SW673 Only Wish I Knew 349, -
0SW674 We Fooled You - , -
What of the music recorded during this
session? Well, as one might expect, it’s very different to that recorded under Hodges’
leadership in the late thirties and early forties.
Be bop is clearly making its presence felt
in the sharp stabs from the brass lines behind the soloists. The presence of
Don Byas – living in Paris at the time, I think – also lends a cool modernism
to the proceedings. The sound of the group is reminiscent of the recordings
James Moody was making about this time in Sweden. Indeed, the 1950s saw the
beginnings of that emigration of musicians from New York to the European
continent. Hodges himself, before long,
of course, would attempt to fly free of the Ellingtonian nest and launch his
own solo career. The sessions are, in some ways, a launching pad for his flight.
Three of the four numbers are up-tempo, the
exception being the ballad Only Wish I Knew which in Baker’s tender horn lines,
and despite its rather abrupt ending, is somewhat reminiscent of Miles Davis’s
work in the Birth of the Cool sessions.
Anyway, presented here are those four sides
from Hodges’ Paris sojourn. Medium rarities.
Friday, 13 July 2012
Every Tubbs
I recently acquired half-a-dozen copies of the music
magazine Crescendo from the mid-sixties.
I thought I’d share the following from the magazine for March 1964 on
Duke Ellington’s appearance at the Royal Festival Hall, a month earlier:
At the opening Festival Hall show, Paul Gonsalves was
temporarily indisposed. Tubby, who happened to be backstage, found himself
literally whisked into the vacant chair.
It is an indication of Tubby’s outstanding musicianship that
he navigated without apparent effort scores he had never seen before. As Duke
remarked:
“You’d think he’d made the rehearsal.”
In fact, the rest of the band had rehearsed the new
compositions from 10 am until 4 pm that same day.
Tubby’s reaction to the experience:
“It was tremendous. I felt as if I was dreaming. Some of the
parts were pretty difficult such as ‘Harlem’, with its changes of tempo. There
weren’t any parts for a couple of things, so those I didn’t know I didn’t play.
‘Rockin’ in Rhythm’ I knew okay.
“The band was very helpful, especially Jimmy Hamilton. Some
of them weren’t played as written, so he tipped me off as to what to leave out,
where to come back in and so on.
“The second time through I knew what was coming better, so I
was able to watch Duke more.
“Playing in that section was wonderful. The quality of sound
was quite frightening at times. And they didn’t seem to be blowing over- loud.
As for the band as a whole – most of the time I was concentrating on looking
for the music and playing, but I particularly noticed Lawrence Brown’s terrific
sound behind me.”
There is more than a little poetic license about Tubby’s
happening to be backstage, the truth being rather more prosaic. The quotations
are gold dust, however.
This legendary performance was in fact recorded, as you can see from the picture of the tape box which headlines this post.
I have it on good authority from Tubbs expert Simon Spillett, however, that the sound quality is nothing to write home about. He
says:
If it were, I’d still buy it in a heartbeat...
Recordings by the saxophonist just days before
his allegedly impromptu appearance with the Ellington band are available,
however, on the Savage Solweig label. The disc can be purchased here.
Thursday, 12 July 2012
Things ain't what they used to be...
I found the
following rather melancholy footage of Dutch writer Simon Carmiggeldt recently
whilst browsing You Tube.
It’s a quality of
great music, I suppose, that it can conjure a nostalgia for times lost quite
outside the music itself. If I listen to something by Glenn Miller, I can
remember quite distinctly what it was like to be seventeen – but that’s because
I was listening to Glenn Miller’s music when I was that age. The music, in a
sense, cannot transcend the times in which I first encountered it, its
principal interest to me now, purely nostalgic.
Ellington’s music,
in contrast, takes me back to all sorts of corners of my memory despite the
fact I wasn’t listening to Ellington’s music – wasn’t even aware of him,
perhaps – in that time. This is truly great music which exists in, of, for, outside
and beyond itself.
That’s one thought
prompted by this luminous recording from 1935.
Secondly, the
claims made for the music by Simon Carmiggelt, lost -I don’t doubt to an extent – in translation
are, nevertheless, particularly germane. Carmiggelt says
“It’s a remarkable
epic kind of music. It’s telling and afterwards – when the music is over – you
can actually tell anything about it, it fits everything. Indeed, it seems that
Ellington was and still is a great man, since the music has remained as strong
as steel all these years.”
And the third
point is this: that Ellington’s response to the times in which he lived, the
injustice and indignity frequently visited upon black Americans, was gracious,
beautiful works such as this is remarkable. And one wonders the extent to which
in those lost times, as he listened to this piece, one of the things that
‘fits’ is Simon Carmiggelt’s memory of his brother...
Tuesday, 10 July 2012
... like an ever-rolling stream...
There are some very desirable artefacts often for sale
courtesy of Jazz Record Center’s Ebay auctions. As I write this, there is a
little under two hours to go on what is described as ‘rare Duke Ellington LP’
on the Gotham label. The starting price is $250.00 and there’s at least one
bidder.
The item is described as follows:
"This
recording - “Holiday Greetings from Gotham Recording Corporation” - on Gotham
GRC-2873, includes two of the rarest studio tracks by Duke Ellington. The
deep-groove record is pressed on red vinyl and was distributed as a holiday
promotion (“Not to Be Sold, Broadcast or Copied”). The first two tracks on Side
A are Duke’s “Duet” and “Threesome”, recorded on June 28, 1951. “Threesome” has
a spoken intro by Duke; the band then plays while he and Freddie Robbins
introduce members of the band as they take their solos: Harry Carney, Jimmy
Hamilton, Shorty Baker, Paul Gonsalves, Britt Woodman, Russell Procope, Cat
Anderson, Juan Tizol, and Nelson Williams. The sound quality is superb, with
just a few random tics. The remaining tracks of Side A are “Largo al Factotum”
from Rossini’s “Barber of Seville” (with audible scratch) and an orchestral
version of “I’ll Be Around”. Side B is a bizarre spoken bop narrative that
sounds like a radio play with a lot of hipster terms that were popular in the
early 1950’s. The cover has a 1” area in the top left corner of the front where
a sticker has been removed; clear tape along the bottom seam. A folded
information sheet is included."
It’s not exactly a Duke Ellington LP. Ellington’s
contribution consists of two tracks, the rest being classical music. They’re
not wrong, though. These Holiday Greetings
LPs are difficult to come by – and they are studio recordings by the Ellington
Orchestra made in the Gotham Recording Studios in 1951.
Ellington authority Steven Lasker is no stranger to bidding
on transcription discs. In an edition of the Duke Ellington Music Society Bulletin in 2009, Mr Lasker wrote:
“Today's
mail brought two 16-inch ETs which I won from a recent record auction.
"Stars on Parade" program 575, "Ellington Moods" by Duke
Ellington, is paired with "Stars on Parade" program 576, "Davy
Crockett" starring Conrad Nagel. "Stars on Parade" program 581,
"Music of Manhattan," is paired with program 582, "A Matter of
Time" starring Ethel Griffies.
“The
labels show the dates each program was to be aired: program 575 (by Ellington)
was "release: week of August 19, 1951"; program 576 was
"release: week of August 25, 1951"; program 581 was "release:
week of September 30, 1951"; program 582 was "release: week of October
7, 1951."
“I
note that each date cited was a Sunday, when the Gotham Recording Studio was
likely closed, and that the label of my copy of program 581 (release: week of
September 30, 1951) bears the penciled notation "WMIL 9-22-51," which
I'll guess is the date when the disc was received at radio station WMIL.
“So:
Ellington's "Stars on Parade"/ Gotham recording session wasn't held
on 19Aug51 as shown in every discography, but at some earlier date, perhaps in
late July or early August. To see a photo of the session and a list of the
personnel, see DEMS 02/3-12. The photo is also found on the back cover of
CBS(F)66607 ("The Complete Duke Ellington, 1947-52"), but misdated to
5oct51, the date of the Down Beat issue in which the photo was first published.”
Researching
these Gotham sessions, I found an extract from one of the transcription discs
on You Tube which certainly gives an impression of the fine recorded sound.
Al
Hibbler sings Ol’ Man River. The early fifties were not a particularly
propitious time for the Ellington band as the flame of the big band era
guttered. Ellington’s problems were compounded by the recent departure of such
stars of the Ellington firmament as Johnny Hodges and Billy Strayhorn. And with the voracious demands of countless
radio broadcasts, Ellington cast the net a little more widely for repertoire
than he might otherwise have done. They played show tunes very infrequently.
This particular show tune – well, in its time and given some authenticity in
the dignified performance by Paul Robeson, it is a testament to a certain
picturesque view of the issue of civil rights. In 1951, politics had moved on
somewhat and Ellington’s position within that political situation was unique
anyway. This song is rather dwarfed by Ellington’s achievements as a creator of
‘American Music’. Within months – on the tenth anniversary of the attack on
Pearl Harbour, in fact – he was to record a major work in his Tone Parallel to
Harlem. The composition and performance here is not in the same league. It is
presented, however, for your enjoyment as a souvenir of some sixty-one
summers ago...
PS: The Gotham LP sold for $338.33
PS: The Gotham LP sold for $338.33
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