This day (May 24, 1974), in New York City, died Edward Kennedy Ellington a.k.a Duke Ellington, an American composer, pianist and big-band leader.
VIDEO DIGEST
RVM prescreen
Tracklist :
1 . Take The A Train
2 . La Plus Belle Africaine (1969)
3 . Duke Ellington Orchestra – Prologue To The Black And Tan Fantasy/ Creole Love Call/ The Mooche (1966)
4 . On The Fringe Of The Jungle (1967)
5 . & Ella Fitzgerald – Lush Life (1965)
6 . & His Orchestra – Things Ain’T What They Used To Be (1962)
7 . & His Orchestra – Diminuendo And Crescendo In Blue (1958)
8 . Live In Italy (1958)
9 . C Jam Blues (1942)
TOP 10
Tracklist :
Caravan. In A Sentimental Mood . It Don’t Mean a Thing . Mood Indigo . Solitude . Take The A Train . The Mooche . Black and Tan Fantasy . Sophisticated Lady . Perdido .
SELECTED ALBUMS
Recorded on August 9, 1959, Live at the Blue Note is a live album by Duke Ellington. >>
Recorded at Fifth Avenue Presbyterian Church in New York on December 26, 1965, A Concert of Sacred Music is an album by Duke Ellington. >>
Recorded in England on November 25 and 26, 1969, 70th Birthday Concert is a live album by Duke Ellington. >>
Oscar Peterson Plays the Duke Ellington Song book is an album recorded between July 14 and August 9, 1959 with Ray Brown on double bass and Ed Thigpen on drums. >>
Ellington at Newport is a live album by Duke Ellington and his band recorded on July 7, 1956 at the Newport Jazz Festival. >>
Recorded from December 19 till 21, 1966 in New-York City, The Far East Suite is an album by Duke Ellington and his orchestra. >>
Recorded on December 7 & 11, 1951, February 29, June 30 & July 1, 1952, Ellington Uptown is an album by Duke Ellington. >>
Recorded on November 29, 1962, December 20, 1962 & January 4 & 5, 1963, Afro-Bossa is an album by Duke Ellington. >>
The Nutcracker Suite by Duke Ellington is an album featuring jazz interpretations of The Nutcracker by Tchaikovsky, arranged by Ellington and Billy Strayhorn, recorded on May 26 & 31, June 3, 21 & 22, 1960. >>
Recorded on April 3–4, 1961, Together for the First Time and The Great Reunion are two albums by a sextet combining Duke Ellington with Louis Armstrong & His All-Stars. >>
Duke Ellington‘s Soul Call is a live album recorded with his orchestra on July 26, 27, 28 & 29 1966 at the Juan-les-Pins/Antibes Jazz Festival, Côte d’Azur. >>
Recorded on February 7, 1966, The Stockholm Concert, 1966 is a live album by Ella Fitzgerald, accompanied by the Duke Ellington Orchestra. >>
Recorded in Europe on February 6 or 7, & 21, 1963 and July 27, 1966, In the Uncommon Market is a live album by Duke Ellington. >>
Recorded on October 18,19,20, 1965, Ella at Dukes Place is a studio album by Ella Fitzgerald, accompanied by the Duke Ellington Orchestra. >>
[1969] Duke Ellington and his Orchestra perform at at the Berlin Jazz Festival in West Berlin >> 18 MINUTES on RVM >>
[1962] the Duke Ellington Orchestra tapes a sponsored film in New-York City >> 27 MINUTES on RVM >>
[1958] Duke Ellington is at the Concertgebouw in Amsterdam, The Netherlands >> 15 MINUTES on RVM >>
[1965] Public Television tapes American composer Duke Ellington‘s first Concert of Sacred Music at the new Grace Cathedral in San Francisco. >> 59 MINUTES on RVM >>
[1962] you do not want to miss Duke Ellington being nterviewed by Sven Lindahl for the Swedish public service television SVT. >> 12 MINUTES on RVM >>
[1963] the Duke Ellington All Stars Octet – that is Duke Ellington (p), Rolf Ericson (tp), Lawrence Brown (tb), Johnny Hodges (as), Paul Gonsalves (ts), Harry Carney (bs), Bibi Rovére (b), Sam Woodyard (d) – is at the Sanremo Jazz Festival in Italy >> 14 MINUTES on RVM >>
Wikipedia : This day (May 24, 1974), in New York City, died Edward Kennedy Ellington a.k.a Duke Ellington, an American composer, pianist and big-band leader.
Official Site : Duke Ellington called his music American Music rather than jazz, and liked to describe those who impressed him as beyond category. As both a composer and a band leader, Ellington’s reputation has increased since his death, with thematic repackagings of his signature music often becoming best-sellers.
@allmusic : The two aspects of his career were related; Ellington used his band as a musical laboratory for his new compositions and shaped his writing specifically to showcase the talents of his bandmembers, many of whom remained with him for long periods.
@last.fm : Through the ranks of Duke Ellington’s Orchestra passed some of the biggest names in jazz, including Johnny Hodges, Cootie Williams, Bubber Miley, Joe “Tricky Sam” Nanton, Barney Bigard, Ben Webster, Harry Carney, Sonny Greer, Otto Hardwick, Clark Terry, Jimmy Blanton, Ray Nance, Paul Gonsalves, etc.
Before elegance becomes a method. Nothing in Duke Ellington’s case begins in rupture or deprivation. Childhood unfolds instead within a carefully structured space where music, language, and manners form a foundation, almost a form of protection. Before the piano as ambition, before the orchestra as horizon, there is a precise idea of what a young Black man in Washington should be: dignified, polite, irreproachable, visible without provocation. This idea is not abstract. It takes shape in a household, streets, daily habits.
The Ellington family belongs to the Black middle class of the federal capital, living in a fragile but real balance. James Edward Ellington, the father, works as a technical draftsman for the Navy, a skilled position above subsistence. In parallel, he serves in trusted roles for Dr. Middleton F. Cuthbert, an influential white physician: first as coachman, then chauffeur, butler, and organizer of receptions. This service work introduces him to spaces of power whose codes he observes. He brings back food, wine, stories. The home absorbs these discreet signs of comfort without displaying them as wealth.
Geography matters. The Ellingtons first live in the West End, then move to LeDroit Park near Howard University. Tree-lined streets, Victorian row houses, concentration of Black professionals create a specific environment: segregated, yet oriented toward social advancement. The house at 420 Elm Street NW, narrow and vertical, with a piano in the front room, embodies controlled comfort without display.
In this environment, racism is present but countered through collective discipline. Parents teach that Black and white people have equal value, but that equality must be demonstrated through excellence and restraint. Pride is expressed through conduct. This principle shapes dress, speech, movement, piano playing.
Edward Kennedy Ellington begins piano around age seven with Marietta Clinkscales. Lessons are classical, rigid, and he resists them. He prefers baseball, street games. He misses more lessons than he attends. Music is not yet vocation. It is an activity among others. The teacher’s remark that he is “very talented” produces no immediate effect.
The nickname precedes ambition. Because of his careful dress and manner, peers begin calling him “Duke.” The title is not mockery but recognition. Ellington later credits a friend, Edgar McEntee, with the name. It settles as description, not pose.
School reinforces this dual path. In Black public schools of Washington, discipline is strong, African American history emphasized. At Garnet Elementary, then junior high, Ellington develops a strong interest in drawing and painting. He considers becoming a visual artist. This inclination is serious enough that he is later offered a scholarship to Pratt Institute. Music remains secondary.
Armstrong Technical High School accentuates this distance. The school focuses on technical and artistic training. Ellington excels in art, performs poorly in music. He does not see himself as model student, but as someone learning elsewhere.
That elsewhere is nearby, in another Washington. Around age fourteen, he begins visiting Frank Holliday’s Poolroom near the Howard Theatre on T Street. The place gathers gamblers, porters, musicians. The piano is central. Ragtime and stride players perform for hours. Ellington listens, observes, memorizes. He does not impose himself. He learns.
The contrast is decisive. Daytime LeDroit Park teaches restraint. Nighttime poolroom teaches efficiency, swing, usable virtuosity. Ellington moves between both without opposition. He absorbs.
A shift occurs when he begins working. He sells peanuts at Washington Senators games, crosses the city, discovers new geography. Later, as soda jerk, he composes “Soda Fountain Rag” in 1914, entirely by ear. The piece adapts to multiple forms. He notices the audience does not detect it is the same composition. The idea of repertoire appears before technique.
Technique follows necessity. Oliver “Doc” Perry teaches him reading, chords, professional discipline, and presentation suited to salons and dances. The teaching is practical. Henry Lee Grant provides further lessons in harmony, reinforcing what Ellington already practices.
At the same time, he continues drawing, painting signs, working as letterer. This dual activity provides independence. He declines both his Armstrong diploma and Pratt scholarship, leaving school months before graduation. Formal education no longer adds to what he learns elsewhere.
What forms in Washington is not yet a career, but a method. Ellington learns to move between social spaces, to adapt his playing without losing composure, to observe before asserting. Poolroom ragtime and stride meet domestic elegance. Drawing shapes his sense of form. The Black bourgeois environment instills a lasting principle: excellence as strategy.
The rest comes later. Here, everything is already configured: a child trained to represent, an adolescent learning to navigate without breaking, a young man constructing his own formation rather than receiving it.
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