| 1. It Don't Mean a Thing (If It Ain't Got That Swing) |
| 2. Sophisticated Lady |
| 3. I Got It Bad (And That Ain't Good) |
| 4. Black and Tan Fantasy |
| 5. Mood Indigo |
| 6. I Let a Song Go Out of My Heart |
| 7. Solitude |
| 8. Caravan |
Editorial Reviews
Like Money Jungle, the later collaboration between Duke Ellington, Charles Mingus, and Max Roach, this collection of Ellingtonia showed how much a modernist the Duke really was. Without a doubt, Ellington is more clearly recalled as an architect of the Swing Era, but in Monk's hands, Ellington's tunes sound as pregnant with post-swing potential as anything in the bebop canal. Monk recorded these tunes at the request of Riverside Records founder Orrin Keepnews, who knew how idiosyncratic the pianist was, and rather than produce literal transcriptions, Monk went all over the map. Stride shades drop in amid the off-center melody statements. And shot throughout all the tunes is Monk's persistently interstitial approach, whereby he spots seams and creases in every phrase and then fills, comments on, and dances around them. As the first chapter, if you will, in the Complete Riverside box set, this makes a great platform for viewing Monk's ascent into unbridled genius. --Andrew Bartlett
Plays Duke Ellington,Thelonious Monk,Ojc,Bop,Jazz,Pop
Average customer rating:
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Plays Duke Ellington
Thelonious Monk Manufacturer: Riverside ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000NDEXQG Release Date: 2007-03-27 |
Tracks:
- It Don't Mean a Thing (If It Ain't Got That Swing)
- Sophisticated Lady
- I Got It Bad (And That Ain't Good)
- Black and Tan Fantasy
- Mood Indigo
- I Let a Song Go out of My Heart
- Solitude
- Caravan
Customer Reviews:
Simply amazing.......2007-07-14
Conservative Monk.......2007-05-25
Most of the playing is charming and enjoyable, and fans of Monk and Ellington both will certainly enjoy this. Just don't expect to be "Wowed" by it.
A Landmark Testimony Of Jazz........2007-03-29
Listen. This album is a masterpiece of charm and daring, ringing
tonal joy and hard-dancing rhythmic flight. It has withstood the test
of time for over 50 years, and continues to call fresh audiences to
witness. It was the debut of one of the most versatile record labels
in all of Jazz, Riverside Records' resounding gauntlet to the world
on the power, precision, and passion of this African American-rooted
world forum. Most of all, it stands as a showcase of aesthetic nobility,
the compositional finese of Duke Ellington paid conceptual homage by
one of the few pianists who understood the impact of the Duke's many
efforts, matching it with a fierce originality all his own.
THELONIOUS MONK PLAYS DUKE ELLINGTON is a delightful portrait
of swing and intrigue, Monk crossing the tonal and atonal to deftly
weave chromatic splendor which tickles and tugs on the ear and the
mind, fingers pouring an uncanny balladry to win the soul. An
impeccable trio recording displaying the kindred wares of bassist
Oscar Pettiford and drummer Kenny Clarke, Monk spins enchanting
harmonic tapestries which beckon each listener's attention.
You will never hear "It Don't Mean A Swing (If It Ain't
Got That Swing)" played with such an ironically delicious sense of
freedom and groove as the High Priest delivers in the sure-rolling
scenic cruise holding court here. "Solitude", in a captivating solo
performance, conveys the significance of both loneliness and fortitude
from one who defines the meaning of marching to the beat of a different
drum.In each of the album's eight performances, we are treated to
sterlingeloquence,earthy testimony, and a winning humility which caps
theregal heart of this epic portrait.
Given a long-overdue 24-bit remastering by Joe Tartantino, THELONIOUS
MONK PLAYS DUKE ELLINGTON has never sounded clearer,
or more intimate, than it does in this current release. The classic
1955 session kicks off the Orrin Keepenews collection; an ongoing
monument to the producer who has contributed so much to this Music.
No better place to begin than with the Beginning, where a fledging
entrepreneur stretched a hand to aid one of the most misunderstood
geniuses in the annals of Music.
With this recording, the overdue appreciation -and lasting
triumph- of Thelonious Monk began.
A half-century later, there's no end in sight.
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Oscar Peterson Plays the Duke Ellington Song Book
Oscar Peterson Manufacturer: Polygram Records ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00000HYIB Release Date: 1999-03-23 |
Tracks:
- John Hardy's Wife
- Sophisticated Lady
- Things Ain't What They Used To Be
- Just A-Sittin' And A-Rockin'
- In A Mellow Tone
- I Got It Bad (And That Ain't Good)
- Prelude To A Kiss
- Cotton Tail
- Don't Get Around Much Anymore
- Take The 'A' Train
- Rockin' In Rhythm
- Do Nothin' Til You Hear From Me
- Don't Get Around Much Anymore
- Sophisticated Lady
- Rockin' In Rhythm
- Prelude To A Kiss
- In A Mellow Tone
- Cotton Tail
- Just A-Sittin' And A-Rockin'
- Things Ain't What They Used To Be
- Take The 'A' Train
- I Got It Bad (And That Ain't Good)
- Do Nothin' Til You Hear From Me
- John Hardy's Wife
Amazon.com
This CD combines two LPs devoted to the same Duke Ellington material recorded by different versions of the Oscar Peterson trio. The first is of particular interest. Dating from 1952, it was a special event, exploiting the then-new LP format to include a dozen of Ellington's most familiar tunes and featuring a superb band. The young Peterson could generate the swing of a big band, while the similarly virtuosic bassist Ray Brown and guitarist Barney Kessel complement him brilliantly. Together they combine boppish approaches and inspired interplay (and a kinetic energy that you would never expect from a trio without drums) to staples like "In a Mellow Tone," "Take the 'A' Train," and "Rockin' in Rhythm." The second half of the CD is a 1959 stereo remake of the original 1952 session, but with drummer Ed Thigpen taking Kessel's place. Despite the similarity in the material, it's an utterly different session, typical of the masterful manner that Peterson gradually developed. It's well-made music, played with consummate polish and ease and clear regard for the material, though without the inventive edges of the earlier group. --Stuart BroomerCustomer Reviews:
Great, brilliant music. Noisy - but you can fix it if you want to........2007-03-25
Unfortunately, those first twelve tracks are quite noisy. The original tapes were lost, and these cuts were transcribed from vinyl. As they are, there's nothing wrong with listening to some scratchy records. I've done it a thousand times over the years, and the music is still there. But since this is the digital era, there are options. I record all my music on my hard disk, and if you do too it means you can edit the tracks.
Don't be afraid; it's easy. All you need is a sound editing program. I use Adobe Audition, which is expensive, but you can use Audacity, which a terrific program for the right price: free. First rip the CD onto the hard disc, then open the song files in the sound editor. These programs have noise reduction functions that are extremely sophisticated and powerful built into them, as good as most professional studios. Play with the settings until you get the noise down to where you find it acceptable or inoffensive, but not so much that you blunt the music. The programs really work; you'll have MUCH less noise, and the recordings will sound terrific. Then save the file, and you're set. Play like any other record. A tip: rip the CD as WAV files to do the editing. You can always convert to MP3 if you want, but your results won't be as good if you try to edit compressed files.
The noisiest track is #12, Do Nothing Till You Hear From Me, which Oscar tranforms into something living and breathing. Just uncanny music. I'm listening to it as I type this, and there still is some noise, but it's A LOT less, not enough to get in the way of enjoying the artistry. His genius and skills all came together here, so it was worth touching up. He does a second version on track 23, and it's wonderful, but the first one is a true standout among jazz performances. What's a little noise when the music's this superb?
The whole process took me about 25 minutes, a bit of a nuisance but so what. I probably would have goofed off if I hadn't sat down and done it. Now I've got these phenomenal tracks that I'm certain to play again and again.
There is a different edition of these recordings available, with some noise reduction already done, as mentioned by another reviewer, but I'd rather do my own. A heavy hand dilutes the energy of the music, but if you do it yourself you'll get it just how you like it. And it's fun! Editing your records is one of the kicks of digital music. You can easily trim unwanted applause, talking between tracks, overlong tracks, do fade-ins, fade-outs, make soft parts louder or loud parts softer, repeat choruses, get rid of draggy sections and lots more, just like the pros. Plus you can record old vinyl records, and get rid of the scratches! How cool is that? Even if you don't feel like editing this disk, get ahold of a sound editing program. You'll have a blast.
To sum up after all that long-winded rambling: Buy this CD! It's awesome. It's got some of the best jazz by the best artists ever recorded.
Enjoy,
Tom B
Jazz Student.......2007-01-09
Poor sound quality but there is a solution.......2006-02-21
Normaly I don't like noise reduction but... the 4 CD set Piano Power (available at Amazon) includes all the cuts on this Duke CD and are much, much quieter. Good use of noise reduction.
Poor sound quality.......2005-04-19
A great Album- Amazon's Tracklisting wrong.......2005-01-13
However, Amazon's tracklisting does not include tracks 13-24. A different trio, it features Ray Brown on Bass(same as on tracks 1-12), but instead of the great Barney Kessel on Guitar, it has Ed "Pigpen" Thigpen on drums (Actually, that's not his nickname, I just like to call him that!) Although some of the tracks have a bit of high-end hiss, this is overall an amazing group. Highly recommended!
Average customer rating:
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Definitive Collection
Manufacturer: Arena Records UK ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000648OR Release Date: 2001-11-02 |
Tracks:
- Wenn Ich Vergnn
- Uch Wollt' Ich W Ein Huhn
- Veronika, Der Lenz Ist Da
- Bin Kein Hauptmann, Bin Kein Gros Tier
- Ein Freund, Ein Guter Freund
- Creol Love Call
- Bist Nicht Die Erste
- Baccarole
- Der Sch Blauen Donau
- Quant il Pleut
- Ein Bisschen Leichtsinn Kann Nicht Schaden
- Ich Hab' Fh 'Nen Blumentopf Bestellt
- Jetzt Trinken Wir Noch Eins
- Ist Die Liebe Der Matrosen
- Liebling, Mein Herz L Dich Gr
- Irgendwo Auf Der Welt
- Ali Baba
- Maria Marie
- Auf Dem Heuboden
- Liebesleid
- Tout le Jour
- Wir Sind Von Kopf Bis FuAuf Liebe Eingestellt
- So Ein KuKommt Von Allein
- Musketier Marsch
- Mein Kleiner, Graktus
Tracks:
- Hoppla, Jetzt Komm'ich
- Kannst du Pfeifen, Johanna
- Tea for Two
- In Der Bar Zum Krokodil
- Eine Kleine Frsweise
- Eins, Zwei, Drei, Vier Glh Bin Ich Nur Mit Dir
- Die Liebe Kommt, Die Liebe Geht
- Heute Nacht Oder Nie
- Hallo, Was Machst du Heut' Daisy
- Ich Khre Hand Madame
- Auf Wiedersehen Mein Frein, Auf Wiedersehen Mein Herr
- Kleiner Mann, Was Nun
- Hein Spielt Abends So Schuf Dem Schifferklavier
- Mein Lieber Schatz Bist du Aus Spanien
- Onkel Bumba Aus Kalumba
- Perpetuum Mobile
- Leb' Wohl Gute Reise [Farewell, Have a Good Journey]
- Wenn Die Sonja Russisch Tanzt
- Morgen MuIch Fort Von Hier
- Wenn Der Wind Weht er das Meer
- Puppenhochzeit
- Was Dein Roter Mund Im Fr Sagt
- Es Fein Anderer Weg Zur Seligkeit
- SchLisa, Ssa
- Wochenend und Sonnenschein
- Auf Wiedersch'n My Dear
Customer Reviews:
Comedian Harmonists.......2003-05-23
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Reflections On Duke - Jean-Yves Thibaudet Plays The Music Of Duke Ellington
Jean-Yves Thibaudet Manufacturer: Decca ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00000IIZT Release Date: 1999-04-06 |
Tracks:
- Jubilee Stomp
- In A Sentimental Mood
- I Got It Bad And That Ain't Good
- Prelude To A Kiss
- Sophisticated Lady
- The Clothed Woman
- Day Dream
- Tonk
- Beggar's Holiday Suite
- Lush Life
- Fantasy On Caravan
- Come Sunday
- A Single Petal Of A Rose
- Solitude
Customer Reviews:
Ellington would have loved this...........2006-08-19
better and better.......2006-07-25
First-class performances of terrific music.......2002-09-22
While the Bill Evans CD is mainly performances of Jed Distler arrangements and transcriptions, the Ellington CD also includes arrangements by Dick Hyman, and three others.
Also, the Evans CD has a lot of moody tracks and few up-tempo ones. But the Ellington CD has a good mixture and "works" much more satisfyingly as a program.
Standout tracks include:
Jubilee Stomp [the opening track]
I Got It Bad and That Ain't Good [a Bill Evans performance, transcribed by Distler]
Sophisticated Lady
Beggar's Holiday Suite
and
Fantasy on Caravan
Highly recommended
THIBAUDET'S ELLINGTON is as good as THIBAUDET'S RAVEL........1999-06-09
Average customer rating:
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Mancini Plays Mancini & Other Composers
Manufacturer: Delta Camden ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B00003L9HZ Release Date: 1999-12-21 |
Tracks:
- Till There Was You
- Bluesy
- Tender Is The Night
- In A Mellow Tone
- A Shot In The Dark
- Fluters' Ball
- Kelley's Tune
- White On White
- A Mild Blast
- The Shadow Of Paris
Customer Reviews:
It should get a 5 star rating, but.........2005-07-18
Average customer rating: |
Duke Ellington Plays Mary Poppins
Duke Ellington Manufacturer: Collectables ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0007CYEAS Release Date: 2005-03-15 |
Tracks:
- A Spoonful of Sugar
- Chim Chim Cheree
- Feed the Birds
- Let's Go Fly a Kite
- Stay Awake
- Love To Laugh
- Jolly Holiday
- Sister Suffragette
- The Perfect Nanny
- Step In Time
- The Life I Lead
- Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious
Average customer rating: |
Plays Duke Ellington
Bobby Rodriguez Manufacturer: Ild Classics ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B00008FARM Release Date: 1996-10-11 |
Average customer rating:
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Plays Duke Ellington
World Saxophone Quartet Manufacturer: Nonesuch ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000005IXZ Release Date: 1991-07-01 |
Tracks:
- Take The 'A' Train
- Lush Life
- Prelude To A Kiss
- Sophisticated Lady
- I Let A Song Go Out Of My Heart
- Come Sunday
- In A Sentimental Mood
- Take The 'A' Train
Amazon.com
Duke Ellington's work has always appealed to innovative musicians, from Thelonious Monk to Cecil Taylor to Don Byron. That dynamic, decades-long tradition is apparent on this CD, with the World Saxophone Quartet finding ways to adapt Ellington and Strayhorn classics to its four-saxophone format and free vocabulary. From the early '30s, the Ellington Orchestra always possessed a great reed section, and Duke excelled at wringing lush and varied textures from it. Those reed sections clearly inspired this project, with the sounds of Ellingtonians like Harry Carney, Johnny Hodges, and Russell Procope echoing here in the work of Julius Hemphill, Oliver Lake, David Murray, and Hamiet Bluiett. The gorgeous melody of "Come Sunday" inspires a superb solo from Murray, who reaches back through a tradition of radical tenor saxophonists to touch on the lyric wellspring of Ben Webster. Similarly, altoist Oliver Lake seems to use the leaping style of Eric Dolphy to reinvent "Prelude to a Kiss." The results are always intriguing, and this is among the WSQ's most durable recordings. --Stuart BroomerCustomer Reviews:
all ellington.......2006-08-30
Unique.......2006-07-04
Great intro to the inimitable WSQ.......2000-08-12
Average customer rating:
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Plays Duke Ellington
Thelonious Monk Manufacturer: Ojc ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000000Y1B Release Date: 1991-07-01 |
Tracks:
- It Don't Mean A Thing (If It Ain't Got That Swing)
- Sophisticated Lady
- I Got It Bad And That Ain't Good
- Black And Tan Fantasy
- Mood Indigo
- I Let A Song Go Out Of My Heart
- Solitude
- Caravan
Amazon.com
Like Money Jungle, the later collaboration between Duke Ellington, Charles Mingus, and Max Roach, this collection of Ellingtonia showed how much a modernist the Duke really was. Without a doubt, Ellington is more clearly recalled as an architect of the Swing Era, but in Monk's hands, Ellington's tunes sound as pregnant with post-swing potential as anything in the bebop canal. Monk recorded these tunes at the request of Riverside Records founder Orrin Keepnews, who knew how idiosyncratic the pianist was, and rather than produce literal transcriptions, Monk went all over the map. Stride shades drop in amid the off-center melody statements. And shot throughout all the tunes is Monk's persistently interstitial approach, whereby he spots seams and creases in every phrase and then fills, comments on, and dances around them. As the first chapter, if you will, in the Complete Riverside box set, this makes a great platform for viewing Monk's ascent into unbridled genius. --Andrew BartlettCustomer Reviews:
Fiesta in Black and Tan.......2006-09-20
Frankly, I agree with people who say this is not true and complete Thelonious experience but, although I love and respect true and complete Thelonious, this is still great jazz.
For, Ellington was a great composer and these performances are nice, modernist and moderately monkish readings of some of his greatest tunes.
Highly recomendable both to Ellington fans and to modern jazz fans, althoug not all of the Monk fans will be thrilled.
Jump right in! The Jazz is fine........2004-06-29
So you want to dip a tentative toe into the vast Ocean of Jazz.
So start right here.
"Plays Ellington'' is a great way to get acquainted with Monk. Listen for a bit and you'll find that there's nothing scary or "difficult' about his music.
Quite simply, Monk is fun.
Trust me, friend.
Jump right in! The Jazz is fine.
Kaz 6.29.04
monk minus monk.......2004-04-07
Ellington was one of the most obvious of Monk's influences- ("Sounds like he's stealing some of my stuff" Ellington is supposed to have said on first hearing a Monk record)- and a set of Ellington' greatest hits would seem like a natural way to let Monk be Monk while playing a set of jazz standards.
Unfortunately, whether out of respect for the material, some degree of tentativeness with a new producer and record label, or from a conscious effort to smooth off some of Monk's more controversial characteristics, the playing on this first Riverside LP seems a little like Smooth Monk. You can tell it's Monk, but kind of generi-sized, as if to convince Erroll Garner fans that Thelonious was their friend, and really wouldn't hurt them. The result is a nice average kind of album: has its moments ("Solitude"), but a little dull in spots ("It Don't Mean A Thing...").
On the next Riverside LP, a collection of standards called "The Unique Thelonious Monk", the arrangements and playing are much more angular and Monk-like, and by the third LP, "Brilliant Corners" no holds are barred, no compromises made. The rest of the Monk Riverside catalog is Monk his way: "Monk's Music", "Thelonious Himself", "Thelonious Monk Orchestra at Town Hall", "5xMonkx5"- all examples of one of the most sharply etched, self-aware musical visions ever.
As phase one of a marketing strategy, "Thelonious Monk Plays Duke Ellington" was fine, but as a Monk album it's just okay.
The Monk plays the Duke........2003-08-22
stunning.......2002-07-02
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Passion Flower: Zoot Sims Plays Duke Ellington
Zoot Sims Manufacturer: Ojc ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000000Z3O Release Date: 1997-06-24 |
Tracks:
- It Don't Mean A Thing
- In A Mellow Tone
- I Got It Bad (And That Ain't Good)
- I Let A Song Go Out Of My Heart
- Black Butterfly
- Do Nothin' Till You Hear From Me
- Your Love Has Faded
- Bojangles
- Passion Flower
Amazon.com
From his 1940s work with Benny Goodman and Woody Herman until his death in 1985, tenor saxophonist Zoot Sims was the quintessential jazz musician. He always kept an enthusiastic commitment to improvising and a profound allegiance to the rhythmic art of swing. On this 1979 date he and a big band play distinctive Ellington orchestrations written by Benny Carter, who, like Ellington, helped architect the Swing Era. Here Sims's melodic and evocative tenor mingles the lightness of Lester Young with some of the richly grained sound of Ben Webster, and his performances of Billy Strayhorn's lush "Passion Flower" and Duke's "I've Got It Bad (And That Ain't Good)" are especially moving. The band is sprinkled with outstanding veterans, including saxophonists Buddy Collette and Marshall Royal, trombonists J.J. Johnson and Grover Mitchell, and the superb pianist Jimmy Rowles. Together they pump fresh and distinctive life into a vision of Ellington's music that includes the spontaneous, the romantic, and the orchestral. --Stuart BroomerJazz Music: