Duke Ellington - 70th Birthday Concert (1999)

Posted By: DjangoTiger

Duke Ellington - 70th Birthday Concert (1999)
MP3 CBR 320 kbps | 2 CDs - 17 Tracks | 1:35:35 | 221 MB
Genre: Jazz | Label: Blue Note

This double CD reissues a Solid State double LP that ranks as one of Duke Ellington's finest recordings of his final decade. The live performance gives listeners a good idea as to just how Duke's ensemble sounded in concert, and it serves as both a retrospective and a display of the strengths of Ellington's mighty band. Among the many highlights are definitive renditions of "Rockin' in Rhythm" and "Take the 'A' Train" (the latter has some wonderful Cootie Williams trumpet), a few features for altoist Johnny Hodges, a tenor battle on "In Triplicate," a few guest spots for organist Wild Bill Davis, and a 16-and-a-half-minute, nine-song medley that really works well. The most memorable chorus of all is an incredible high-note display by Cat Anderson on "Satin Doll" that is arguably his most miraculous solo ever; each note he hits is virtually impossible to play on the trumpet, and is in tune, too. This gem is essential for all serious jazz collections. (allmusic)

Captured on a 1969 tour by United Artists (and reissued by Blue Note), Duke Ellington's 70th Birthday Concert presents both familiar hits and newer compositions. On Final Speech/Satin Doll, Duke is as commanding and clever as ever, explaining to the audience that the hushed strains of "Satin Doll" are "background to this finger-snapping bit. And you are all cordially invited to join the finger-snapping. I don't have to tell you: One never snaps one's fingers on the beat, it's considered aggressive. Don't push it, just let it fall." (amazon)

Tracklist:

СD 1:

1. Rockin' In Rhythm
2. B.P.
3. Take The A Train
4. Tootie For Cootie
5. 4:30 Blues
6. El Gato
7. Black Butterfly
8. Things Ain't What They Used To Be
9. Laying On Mellow

CD 2:

1. Satin Doll
2. Azure
3. In Triplicate
4. Perdido
5. Fifi
6. Medley
7. Black Swan
8. Final Ellington Speech

Personnel:

Art Direction – Frank Gauna
Bass – Victor Gaskin
Drums – Rufus "Speedy" Jones
Edited By, Sequenced By – George Butler
Engineer – Bob Auger
Mastered By – Clair Krepps
Organ – Wild Bill Davis
Photography By – David Redfern
Piano – Duke Ellington
Producer – Noel Walker
Saxophone – Harold Ashby, Harry Carney, Johnny Hodges, Norris Turney, Paul Gonsalves, Russell Procope
Trombone – Chuck Connors, Lawrence Brown
Trumpet – Cat Anderson, Cootie Williams, Mercer Ellington, Rolf Ericson