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Live At Carnegie Hall Dec, 11, 1943

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Download links and information about Live At Carnegie Hall Dec, 11, 1943 by Duke Ellington. This album was released in 2001 and it belongs to Jazz genres. It contains 25 tracks with total duration of 01:46:27 minutes.

Artist: Duke Ellington
Release date: 2001
Genre: Jazz
Tracks: 25
Duration: 01:46:27
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Star Spangeld Banner 1:36
2. Introduction 1:04
3. Take The A Train 3:18
4. Moon Mist 3:37
5. Tea For Two 3:00
6. Honeysuckle Rose 3:46
7. Star Dust 4:41
8. C Jam Blues 4:42
9. West Indian Influence 3:20
10. Lighter Attitude 4:00
11. New World A-Coming 14:10
12. Floor Shows 3:50
13. Don't Get Around Much Any more 4:22
14. Introduction 0:40
15. Ring Dem Bells 2:53
16. Award Winning Compositons 6:40
17. Jack The Bear 3:43
18. Do Nothing Till You Hear From Me 3:19
19. Sumnertime 3:59
20. Cotton Tail 3:50
21. Black And Tan Fantasy 5:56
22. Rockin In Rhythm 5:16
23. Sentimental Lady 3:52
24. Trumpet In Spades 4:45
25. Things Ain't What They Used To Be 6:08

Details

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Between 1943 and 1948, Duke Ellington & His Orchestra typically made one or more annual trips to perform at Carnegie Hall. His second performance of December 11, 1943, is not historically equal to the January concert, which marked the debut of his complete tone poem "Black, Brown & Beige" (played complete on only one other occasion a few days later in Boston), though the sound on this two-CD set fares better than the somewhat deteriorated source material for the first Carnegie Hall concert. The music is a mix of both old and new songs from the Ellington songbook, popular hits of the day, and the inevitable medley of the pianist's most requested numbers. Illness kept singer Betty Roche from performing and limited valve trombonist Juan Tizol exclusively to section work, but the band is otherwise intact and in good form. There are a number of excellent solo features, including violinist Ray Nance in "Take the 'A' Train" (without addition of the jive vocals that became his trademark), trumpeter Shorty Baker on "Stardust," bassist Junior Raglin in "Jack the Bear," and the legendary alto saxophonist Johnny Hodges in "Don't Get Around Much Anymore." Oddly enough, this is not an aircheck, but discs the bandleader had recorded for his own purposes. Though the sound isn't flawless, Ellington fans will appreciate the opportunity to hear an entire concert from a period in the middle of one of James Petrillo's idiotic recording bans.