As with Gershwin, Duke Ellington presents a formidable challenge in trying to narrow down the hundreds of compositions that he composed over a fifty-year period. One could easily do a program limited to a particular decade, instrumental pieces from the 1920s, for example: "The Mooch", "Black and Tan Fantasy", "Black Beauty". Or the instrumental pieces turned into popular songs in the ‘30s: "Mood Indigo", "In a Sentimental Mood", "Sophisticated Lady". Or the music from his ventures into Broadway musicals: "I Got It Bad", "Jump For Joy". Or his collaborations with Billy Strayhorn: "Take the A Train", "Chelsea Bridge", "Lush Life". These are only a part of the Ellington legacy the Jazz Kings will explore. A final reason to celebrate these composers is that 1998 is 100th anniversary, of the birth of George Gershwin, and 1999 is the 100th anniversary of Duke Ellington’s birth. What a century with composers such as these!
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Event Personnel |
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Vocalists |
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Musicians |
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Steve Owen, reedsFrank Kenney, reedsJames Phillips, reedsBob Bork, reedsTim Clarke, trumpetDave Bender, trumpetErnie Carbajal, trumpetCaleb Standafer, tromboneGlenn Bonney, tromboneJim Greenwood, pianoMark Forrest, guitarNathan Waddell, bassAlan Tarpinian, drums |
| | Creole Love Call (1927) Rhyth-mania Duke Ellington, Bubber Miley, Rudy Jackson (m) |
SET II. ELLINGTON TRANSFORMATIONS |
| | Take The 'A' Train (1939) interpolated into Reveille with Beverly Joya Sherrill (w) Billy Strayhorn (m) |