Duke Ellington
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| Duke Ellington | ||
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Duke in Germany, February 6, 1965
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| Background information | ||
| Birth name | Edward Kennedy Ellington | |
| Also known as | Duke | |
| Born | April 29, 1899 |
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| Died | May 24, 1974 (age 75) New York, New York, USA |
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| Genre(s) | Jazz | |
| Occupation(s) | Bandleader, composer | |
| Instrument(s) | Piano | |
| Years active | 1917 - 1974 | |
| Label(s) | Blue Note, Brunswick, Impulse!, Verve, Victor | |
| Website | DukeEllington.com | |
Edward Kennedy "Duke" Ellington (April 29, 1899–May 24, 1974) was an American jazz composer, pianist, and band leader who has been one of the most influential figures in jazz, if not in all American music. As a composer and a bandleader especially, Ellington's reputation has increased since his death, with thematic repackagings of his signature music often becoming best-sellers.
A man of suave demeanor and puckish wit that often masked occasional brusqueness, Ellington preferred to call his style and sound "American music" rather than just jazz, and liked to describe those who impressed him as "beyond category," including and especially many of the musicians who served with his orchestra. Some of them were considered among the giants of jazz in their own right—particularly reedmen Johnny Hodges, Barney Bigard, Ben Webster, Harry Carney, and Paul Gonsalves; trumpeters Bubber Miley, Cootie Williams, Clark Terry, William "Cat" Anderson, and Ray Nance (who also played violin), trombonists Joe "Tricky Sam" Nanton, Lawrence Brown, and Juan Tizol, bassist Jimmy Blanton, and drummers Sonny Greer, Louis Bellson, and Sam Woodyard—and many of them remained with the Ellington organization for many years.
Many of these musicians played in Ellington's orchestra for decades, and while many were noteworthy in their own right, it was Ellington's musical genius that melded them into one of the most well-known orchestral units in the history of jazz. His compositions were often written specifically for the style and skills of these individuals, such as "Jeep's Blues" for Johnny Hodges, "Concerto for Cootie" (Do nothing Till You Hear From Me) for Cootie Williams and "The Mooche" for Tricky Sam Nanton. He also recorded songs written by his bandsmen, such as Juan Tizol's "Caravan" and "Perdido", which brought the "Spanish Tinge" to big-band jazz.
Ellington was one of the twentieth century's best-known African-American celebrities. He recorded for many American record companies, and appeared in several films. Ellington and his orchestra toured the United States and Europe regularly before and after World War II.
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Duke's father, James Edward Ellington, born in Lincolnton, North Carolina, USA on April 15, 1879, was the son of a former slave. He moved to Washington, D.C. in 1886 with his small family. Ellington was born to J.E. and Daisy Kennedy Ellington who lived in the home of his maternal grandparents at 2129 Ward Place, NW in Washington D.C. J.E. made blueprints for the United States Navy; he also worked as a White House butler for additional income. Daisy and J.E. were both piano players, and at the age of seven Ellington began taking piano lessons from a Mrs. Clinkscales who lived at 1212 Street NW which is the address commonly, but erroneously given as his childhood home).
In his autobiography Music is my Mistress Ellington comments he missed more lessons than what he attended, feeling at the time that playing the piano was not his talent. Over time, this would change. Ellington sneaked into Frank Holiday's Poolroom at age fourteen and began to gain a greater respect for music. Hearing a mentor play the piano ignited Ellington's love for the instrument and he began to take his piano studies seriously.
Instead of going to an academically-oriented high school, he attended Armstrong Manual Training School to study commercial art. Three months before he was to graduate, he left school to pursue his interest in music, and at the age of seventeen, he began performing professionally. Ellington never made broad claims for his piano playing, saying that many Washington piano teachers were superior. The British pianist Stan Tracey has countered this by claiming that Ellington 'had chops', but often chose to focus on the melody that sprung from a number rather than to show off his technical ability.
Duke Ellington married Edna Thompson when he was 19, in 1918. She was his childhood sweetheart.
One important member of the orchestra, trumpeter Bubber Miley, was present for only a short period. An early experimenter in jazz trumpet growling, Miley is credited with morphing the band's style from rigid dance instrumentation to a more "New Orleans", or "jungle" style. An alcoholic, Miley had to leave the band before they gained wider notoriety, and died in 1930 at the age of twenty-eight. He was though an important influence on Cootie Williams, another member of the orchstra in the early years and later.
The 1930s saw Ellington's popularity continue to increase, largely a result of the promotional skills of Duke's manager Irving Mills, who got more than his fair share of co-composer credits. Mills arranged a private train just for the band, so that they would not have to suffer the indignities of segregated accommodations while touring the South. Ellington ended his association with Mills in 1937.
While their United States audience remained mainly African-American in this period, though the Cotton Club had a near exclusive white clientele, the band had a huge following overseas, demonstrated both in a trip to England in 1932 and a 1934 visit to the European mainland. The English visit saw Ellington win praise from members of the 'serious' music community, including composer Constant Lambert.
The band reached a creative peak in the early 1940s, when Ellington wrote for an orchestra of distinctive voices and displayed tremendous creativity. Some of the musicians created a sensation in their own right. The short-lived Jimmy Blanton transformed the use of the double bass in jazz, allowing it to function as a solo rather than a rhythm instrument alone. Ben Webster too, the Orchestra's first regular tenor saxophonist, started a rivalry with Johnny Hodges as the Orchestra's foremost voice in the sax section. Ray Nance joined in, replacing Cootie Williams who had "defected", contemporary wags claimed, to Benny Goodman. Nance, however, added violin to the instrumental colours Ellington had at his disposal. A privately made recording of Nance's first concert date, at Fargo, North Dakota, in November 1940, is probably the most effective display of the band at the peak of its powers during this period. This recording is one of the first of innumerable live performances which survive, made by enthusiasts or broadcasters, significantly expanding the Ducal discography as a result.
Three-minute masterpieces flowed from the minds of Ellington, Billy Strayhorn (from 1939), Duke's son Mercer Ellington, and members of the Orchestra. "Cottontail", "Mainstem", "Harlem Airshaft", "Streets of New York" and dozens of others date from this period.
Ellington's long-term aim became to extend the jazz form from the three-minute limit of the 78 rpm record side, of which he was an acknowledged master. He had composed and recorded "Creole Rhapsody" as early as 1931, but it was not until the 1940s that this became a regular feature of Ellington's work. In this, he was helped by Strayhorn, who had enjoyed a more thorough training in the forms associated with classical music than Ellington himself. The first of these, "Black, Brown, and Beige" (1943), was dedicated to telling the story of African-Americans, the place of slavery, and the church in their history. Unfortunately, starting a regular pattern, Ellington's longer works were not well received; Jump for Joy, an earlier musical, closed after only six performances in 1941.
The first recording ban of 1942-3 had a serious effect on all the big bands because of the increase in royalty payments to musicians its resolution necessitated; the financial viability of Ellington's operation was under threat, though Ellington's income as a songwriter ultimately subsidized the Orchestra.
Meanwhile, the development of modern jazz, or bebop and the music industry's shift to vocalists such as the young Frank Sinatra meant that Ellington's popularity and status as a trendsetter was under threat. For a time though Ellington continued to turn out major work, such as the Kay Davis vocal feature "Transblucency" and major extended compositions such as "Harlem" (1948).
Eventually though, in 1951, Ellington suffered a major loss of personnel, with Sonny Greer, Lawrence Brown, and most significantly, Johnny Hodges leaving to pursue other ventures. By 1955, after several years of recording for Capitol, Ellington no longer had a regular recording affiliation.
Ellington's appearance at the Newport Jazz Festival on July 7, 1956 was to return him to wider prominence. The feature "Diminuendo and Crescendo in Blue", with saxophonist Paul Gonsalves's six-minute saxophone solo, had been in the band's book for a while, but on this occasion it nearly created a riot. The revived attention should not have surprised anyone — Hodges had returned to the fold the previous year, and Ellington's collaboration with Strayhorn had been renewed around the same time, under terms which the younger man could accept. Such Sweet Thunder (1957), based on Shakespeare's plays and characters, and The Queen's Suite the following year (dedicated to Queen Elizabeth II), were products of the renewed impetus which the Newport appearance had helped to create.
The late 1950s also saw Ella Fitzgerald record her Duke Ellington Songbook with Ellington and his orchestra, a recognition that Ellington's songs had now become part of the cultural canon known as the "Great American Songbook".
In the early 1960s, Ellington was between recording contracts, which allowed him to record with a variety of artists mostly not previously associated with him. In 1962, he participated in a session which produced the "Money Jungle" (United Artists) album with Charles Mingus and Max Roach, and also recorded with John Coltrane for Impulse, who also recorded Ellington and his Orchestra with Coleman Hawkins. Musicians who had previously worked with Ellington returned to the Orchestra as members: Lawrence Brown in 1960 and Cootie Williams two years later. Ellington was by now performing all over the world, a significant portion of each year was now spent making overseas tours, and he formed notable new working relationships, among which included the Swedish vocalist Alice Babs.
Ellington was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize in 1965, but was turned down. His reaction at 67 years old: "Fate is being kind to me. Fate doesn't want me to be famous too young." He performed his first Concert of Sacred Music, an attempt at fusing Christian liturgy with jazz, in September of the same year. This concert was followed by two others of the same type in 1968 and 1973, called the Second and Third Sacred Concerts, respectively. This caused enormous controversy in what was already a tumultuous time in the United States. Many saw the Sacred Music suites as an attempt to reinforce commercial support for organized religion, though the Duke simply said it was "the most important thing I've done," perhaps with a touch of hyperbole.
Though his later work is overshadowed by his music of the early 1940s, Ellington continued to make vital and innovative recordings, including The Far East Suite (1966), "The New Orleans Suite" (1970), and "The Afro-Eurasian Eclipse" (1971), until the end of his life. Increasingly, this period of music is being reassessed as people realize how creative Ellington was right up to the end of his life. However, some critics, such as James Lincoln Collier, continue to dismiss Ellington's later work.
Duke Ellington was awarded the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award in 1966. He was later awarded several other prizes, the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1969, and the Legion of Honor by France in 1973, the highest civilian honors in each country. He died of lung cancer and pneumonia on May 24, 1974, a month after his 75th birthday, and was interred in the Woodlawn Cemetery, The Bronx, New York City.
Ellington's film work began in 1929 with the short film Black and Tan Fantasy. He also appeared in the Amos 'n' Andy film Check and Double Check. It was a major hit and helped introduce Ellington to a wide audience. He and his Orchestra continued to appear in films throughout the 1930s and 1940s, both in short films and in features such as Murder at the Vanities (1934). In the late 1950s, his work in films took the shape of scoring for soundtracks, notably Anatomy of a Murder (1959), with James Stewart, in which he also appeared fronting a roadhouse combo, and Paris Blues (1961), which featured Paul Newman and Sidney Poitier as jazz musicians.
A long-time fan of William Shakespeare, he wrote an original score for Timon of Athens that was first used in the Stratford Festival production that opened July 29, 1963 for director Michael Langham, who has used it for several subsequent productions, most recently in an adaptation by Stanley Silverman that expands on the score with some of Ellington's best-known works.
Ellington's sole book musical, Beggar's Holiday, was staged on Broadway in 1946. Sophisticated Ladies, an award-winning 1981 musical revue, incorporated many of the tunes he made famous.
- Places
A large memorial to Duke Ellington, created by sculptor Robert Graham, was dedicated in 1997 in New York's Central Park, near Fifth Avenue and 110th Street, an intersection named Duke Ellington Circle. In his birthplace of Washington, D.C., there stands a school dedicated to his honor and memory: the Duke Ellington School of the Arts. The school educates talented students, who are considering careers in the arts, by providing intensive arts instruction and strong academic programs that prepare students for post-secondary education and professional careers. The Duke Ellington Ballroom, located on the Northern Illinois University Campus, was dedicated in 1980. Although he made two more stage appearances before his death, what is considered Ellington's final "full" concert was performed there March 20, 1974. Ellington is a member of Alpha Phi Alpha, the first black Greek letter fraternity
- Music
Dave Brubeck dedicated him "The Duke" (1954) and recorded it a dozen of times; it became a standard covered by a dozen of other admirers[1] anthumously (such as Miles Davis in 1957 on Miles Ahead) and posthumously (such as George Shearing in 1992 on I Hear a Rhapsody: Live at the Blue Note).
Miles Davis, one month after Ellington's death, created his half-hour dedicated dirge "He Loved Him Madly" (1974) collected on Get Up with It.
Stevie Wonder wrote the song "Sir Duke" as a tribute to Ellington in 1977.
Judy Collins wrote "Song For Duke" in 1975, and included it on her album Judith.
The Ellington Orchestra itself continued intermittently as a "ghost band", led by Mercer Ellington (1919–1996), after his father's death.
- Other
In 1999, in commemoration of the 100th anniversary of his birth, the Pulitzer Board honoured Ellington with a posthumus special award citation for his life-long body of work.[2]
- Stanley Dance, The World Of Duke Ellington, ISBN 0-306-80136-1
- Duke Ellington, Music Is My Mistress, ISBN 0-7043-3090-3
- Mark Tucker, Ellington, The Early Years, University of Illinois Press, 1991. ISBN 0-252-01425-1
- Mercer Ellington, Duke Ellington In Person, Houghton Mifflin, 1978. ISBN 0-395-25711-5
- James Lincoln Collier, Duke Ellington, Oxford University Press, 1987. ISBN 0-19-503770-7
- Ellington, Mercer K."Fast Facts." Duke Ellington.25 CMG WorldWide. 1 February 2007 [1].
- Mood Indigo (with clarinetist Barney Bigard and manager Irving Mills)
- Sophisticated Lady (with Irving Mills and Mitchell Parish)
- Satin Doll (with Billy Strayhorn and Johnny Mercer)
- Do Nothing 'Til You Hear From Me
- I Let a Song Go Out Of My Heart (with Irving Mills, Henry Nemo, John Redmond)
- It Don't Mean A Thing (If It Ain't Got That Swing)
- Cotton Tail (written for Ben Webster)
- (In My) Solitude
- Prelude To A Kiss (with Irving Mills)
- C Jam Blues (a 12-bar blues)
- I'm Beginning To See The Light
- I Got It Bad (And That Ain't Good) (with Paul Webster)
- "Take The 'A' Train", by Billy Strayhorn. The "A" Train of the New York City subway goes to Harlem
- "Things Ain't What They Used To Be", by Mercer Ellington, a rocking 12-bar blues
- "Caravan", by Juan Tizol, an example of the Spanish Tinge
- Masterpieces By Ellington (1950)
- Ellington at Newport-Complete (1999; expansion and restoration of the complete 1956 Newport Jazz Festival performance)
- Such Sweet Thunder (1957)
- Indigos (1957)
- Ella Fitzgerald Sings the Duke Ellington Songbook (1957)
- Newport Jazz Festival (1958) (1958)
- Festival Session (1959)
- Blues in Orbit (1959)
- Anatomy of a Murder (Soundtrack album) (1959)
- Duke Ellington and Johnny Hodges: Back to Back (1959)
- Duke Ellington and Johnny Hodges: Side by Side (1959)
- Piano in the Foreground (1961)
- Louis Armstrong & Duke Ellington (1961)
- Duke Ellington & John Coltrane (1962)
- Duke Ellington meets Coleman Hawkins (1962)
- Money Jungle (1962)
- Afro-Bossa (1962)
- The Great Paris Concert (1963, released 1973)
- Ella at Duke's Place (1965)
- The Symphonic Ellington (1965; 1985 reissue)
- Ella and Duke at the Cote D'Azur (1966)
- The Far East Suite (1966)
- ...And His Mother Called Him Bill (1967)
- Francis A. & Edward K. (1968)
- Latin American Suite (1968)
- 70th Birthday Concert (1969)
- New Orleans Suite (1970)
- The Afro-Eurasian Eclipse (1971)
- Yale Concert (1968, issued 1973)
- Live at the Whitney (1972, issued 1995)
- Duke's Big 4 (1973)
- Duke Ellington's Incidental Music for Shakespeare's Play Timon of Athens adapted by Stanley Silverman (1993). Ellington does not perform on this recording, but it includes previously unreleased compositions.
- Take the 'A' Train
- Malcolm X wrote in his autobiography that he polished Ellington's shoes when he worked at a nightclub.
- ^ "The Duke" by Dave Brubeck: song review, recordings, covers. All Music Guide. Retrieved on 2007-03-21.
- ^ Pulitzer Prize Special Award, Citation. Pulitzer Prize (1999). Retrieved on 2007-03-20.
- The A train with Ella Fitzgerald
- Official site
- Ellington on the Web
- biography — from Down Beat Magazine
- A Duke Ellington Panorama — including detailed discography
- Duke Ellington Collection, 1927–1988 — Archives Center, National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution.
- 1981 Real Audio interview with Don George about Duke Ellington by Don Swaim
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