• Tune List

    Traveling with Duke: Scenes from a Legendary Life

    • NIGHTSPELL
    • IT DON'T MEAN A THING (IF IT AIN'T GOT THAT SWING) w/ Clark Terry
    • BLACK BEAUTY Jim Turner piano solo
    • DO NOTHING 'TIL YOU HEAR FROM ME w/ John and Bucky Pizzarelli
    • EAST ST. LOUIS TOODLE-OO
    • DROP ME OFF IN HARLEM w/ Dick Hyman and Vernel Bagneris
    • IN MY SOLITUDE w/ Topsy Chapman and Nicholas Payton
    • RING DEM BELLS w/ Ken Peplowski
    • DON'T GET AROUND MUCH ANYMORE with Clark Terry
    • COME SUNDAY w/ Dick Hyman
    • DAYDREAM w/ Bob Wilber
    • Closer/credits: TAKE THE A TRAIN
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    Traveling with ‘The Duke’: Scenes from a Legendary Life

    Program Sample

    A childhood friend nicknamed him “Duke,” and Edward Kennedy Ellington lived up to that royal title. His personal air of grace and refinement comes across both in his music and his memoirs.

     

    Duke Ellington. Photo courtesy finishmysong.com

    The sheer volume of Duke Ellington’s lifetime musical output is remarkable. With 2,000 compositions to his credit, he wrote hundreds of pop songs, jazz tunes, musical comedy scores for theater, and film scores for hit movies like Anatomy of a Murder. He composed three concerts of sacred music and several large-scale orchestral suites, including his Diminuendo and Crescendo in Blue.

     


    But many believe that he was at his best composing short, three-minute pieces tailor-made to fit the ten-inch record disc, the commercial standard of the era. From his early works, like the 1927 recording of “East St. Louis Toodle-Oo” and his 1930 hit “Mood Indigo” to later pieces, including the 1940 classic “Cotton Tail,” Duke Ellington used the three-minute form mandated by the recording studio to create dynamic, miniature works of art.

     

    Vernel Bagneris - Photo courtesy Riverwalk Jazz

    Dick Hyman - Photo courtesy DickHyman.com

    This week on Riverwalk Jazz, The Jim Cullum Jazz Band and special guest Dick Hyman present a program of these jewel-like, short jazz pieces from the Duke Ellington repertoire. And Broadway actor Vernel Bagneris brings to life scenes from Ellington’s legendary life in first person accounts.

     

     

     

    Duke Ellington published his memoirs in Music is My Mistress. And, in the 1970s, jazz writer Stanley Dance collected more Ellington recollections in The World of Duke Ellington. Script material on this broadcast draws on excerpts from both publications. This excerpt is from Music is My Mistress:

     

     

     

    "Mood Indigo" Sheet Music, 1931, Image courtesy Antiqbooks.com

    “Music is my mistress, and she plays second fiddle to none. To hear her speak, you can’t believe your ears. She is ten thousand years old. Yet, she is as modern as tomorrow, a brand new woman every day, and as endless as time mathematics. I look forward to her every gesture.”

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Photo credit for Home Page and Recent Radio Broadcast Page:
    Duke Ellington at work. photo courtesy finishmysong.com

     




    Text based on Riverwalk Jazz script by Margaret Pick ©2011