Album Reviews

Duke Ellington

These are the first reviews submitted to the JazzWeb; don't become to enamored of their position in the information pool, as it may change drastically. If you'd like to submit reviews of these or other recordings, go right ahead -- the more I get, the more motivation I'll have to organize them!

I reserve the right to totally reject sketchy reviews, and right now, I am not going to write any style guidelines. Suck it up. I think these are structured pretty well, so something like this would be a good start. Send 'em to me at j-germuska@nwu.edu.

Date: Mon, 27 Feb 1995 20:34:47 -0800
From: "Paul B. Shapiro" <fspbs@aurora.alaska.edu>
Subject: Info on earlier Ellington recordings

   Two recordings by Ellington from the period 1940-43 which are very
much worth anyone's listening time:

The Blanton/Webster band (RCA Bluebird) (3 CD set). The cream of the
band's studio recordings from the period that many consider
Ellington's greatest. Not only are Jimmy Blanton and Ben Webster heard
to great advantage, but so are all the other
 great soloists, including Cootie Williams, Rex Stewart, Ray Nance,
"Tricky Sam" Nanton, Juan Tizol, Lawrence Brown, Johnny Hodges, Harry
Carney, and Barney Bigard along with the classic works penned by Billy
Strayhorn. Includes "Take the A Train," "All Too Soon," "Chelsea
Bridge", "Cottontail", "KoKo" and many others.  A good starting point
for anyone who is interested in assembling an Ellington
 collection.

Live @ Fargo, ND, 11/7/1940. (Vintage Jazz Classics) (2 CD set) 

Unique live session recorded by Jack Towers at the Crystal Ballroom in
Fargo, North Dakota. Towers is today known as one of the world's most
renowned audio restoration engineers, and is also probably one of the
world's biggest fans of Ellingtonia. Many of the classics are here,
but so are some lesser known gems that Ellington probably never
recorded commercially including "Honeysuckle Rose" and "St. Louis
Blues" (at least not with this band!!). Many of the soloists mentioned
above are here too--Webster, Hodges, and Stewart are in very good
form--it should also be known that this was Ray Nance's first night
with the band. Highly recommended.

Joe Germuska
j-germuska@nwu.edu -- 708/467-3037
WNUR-FM, Northwestern University
Last Updated: 95/02/28