The biggest change for the Duke Ellington Orchestra in the relatively brief period covered by this CD is that on "Little Posey," Jimmy Blanton became the band's new bassist, taking over for Billy Taylor. While Taylor was a fine supportive player, Blanton was the first great soloist on his instrument and an innovative player who was a decade ahead of his time. This CD in Classics' extensive Duke Ellington chronological series, as usual, has all of the master takes from both Ellington's big band and the small groups led by his sidemen (trumpeter Cootie Williams and altoist Johnny Hodges), but skips over the valuable alternate takes. Among the most memorable selections are the spirited "I'm Checkin' Out Go'ombye," "Black Beauty," "The Sergeant Was Shy," two versions of "Grievin'," "Little Posey," and "Tootin' Through the Roof" (which has a brief trumpet battle by Cootie Williams and Rex Stewart). Scott Yanow Tracklist :
23.10.23
DUKE ELLINGTON AND HIS ORCHESTRA – 1939, Vol. 2 | The Classics Chronological Series – 780 (1994) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
DUKE ELLINGTON AND HIS ORCHESTRA – 1939-1940 | The Classics Chronological Series – 790 (1994) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
This CD has Duke Ellington's final recordings for the Columbia and Vocalion labels before switching over to Victor and beginning what many consider to be his greatest period on record. During this period, Ben Webster joined the band on tenor, taking his first solo on "Solitude." The band was up to ten major soloists and, whether heard as the full orchestra or in small groups led by altoist Johnny Hodges, clarinetist Barney Bigard, or trumpeter Cootie Williams, the music was generally very rewarding. High points of this intriguing transitional disc include an Ellington piano solo on "Blues," "Lost in Two Flats," and several remakes (including "Solitude," "Mood Indigo," and "Sophisticated Lady"). In addition, a pair of unprecedented bass-piano duets ("Blues" and "Plucked Again") for the first time really show off the solo abilities of bassist Jimmy Blanton. Scott Yanow Tracklist + Credits :
21.10.23
DUKE ELLINGTON AND HIS ORCHESTRA – 1941 | The Classics Chronological Series – 851 (1995) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
Duke Ellington's last recordings before Pearl Harbor are on this CD. The band's personnel remained remarkably consistent, except that Jimmy Blanton was forced into retirement by tuberculosis before the final four selections on this disc, unfortunately passing away the following year. Included on this set are sessions led by cornetist Rex Stewart, altoist Johnny Hodges, and clarinetist Barney Bigard, which include the initial recordings of "Subtle Slough" (soon renamed "Just Squeeze Me"), "Passion Flower," "Things Ain't What They Used to Be," and "C Jam Blues" (initially called "'C' Blues"). The big band selections are highlighted by "Rocks in My Bed," Billy Strayhorn's "Chelsea Bridge," and "Raincheck." This is classic music, whether acquired in this series or with the alternate takes on its American counterpart through RCA/Bluebird. Scott Yanow Tracklist :
DUKE ELLINGTON AND HIS ORCHESTRA – 1942-1944 | The Classics Chronological Series – 867 (1996) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
The first 13 selections on this CD complete the reissue of the studio recordings of the classic 1939-1942 Duke Ellington & His Orchestra. Among the more notable selections are "Perdido," "The 'C' Jam Blues," "What Am I Here For," "Main Stem," and "Johnny Come Lately." The other nine numbers are much rarer than those Victor records, for they are V-discs cut during the recording strike of 1942-1944, primarily remakes of earlier Ellington hits. Although not quite essential (the Victors are easily available domestically), this set nevertheless has plenty of memorable performances by Ellington's World War II band. Scott Yanow Tracklist :
20.10.23
DUKE ELLINGTON AND HIS ORCHESTRA – 1945-1946 | The Classics Chronological Series – 985 (1998) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
DUKE ELLINGTON AND HIS ORCHESTRA – 1947 | The Classics Chronological Series – 1086 (1999) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
The Ellington band was in transition when these sides were cut in 1947. The big-band scene was slowly winding down after World War II, but the group had just signed with Columbia, an assurance of better distribution. But the band was also being handed some pretty weird material -- commercial fare like "Kitty," "Cowboy Rhumba" (with Woody Herman guesting on vocals), and "Antidisestablishmentarianismist." There's some great music here, but file this volume under "for completists only." Cub Koda Tracklist + Credits :
18.10.23
DUKE ELLINGTON AND HIS ORCHESTRA – 1949-1950 | The Classics Chronological Series – 1191 (2001) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
With the end of the 1948 recording strike, Duke Ellington's orchestra appeared on record for the first time in 22 months on November 1, 1949. The classic band was still largely intact (although Al Sears had departed and the trumpet section was a bit weaker than earlier), but its label (Columbia) was clearly hoping for some new hits. This collection has some unusual pieces along the way, including "Joog, Joog" and "The Piano Roll Blues," but there is an excellent four-song date featuring former Ellington sideman Oscar Pettiford on cello. Oddest of all is a September 21, 1950, date that mixes together Ellington, altoist Johnny Hodges, baritonist Harry Carney, and bassist Wendell Marshall with boppish trumpeter Red Rodney, drummer Max Roach, and a variety of vocalists (Chubby Kemp, Sarah Ford, and Al Hibbler). Some of this material was formerly quite rare and, although it is not essential, Ellington completists may be particularly interested in this CD. Scott Yanow Tracklist + Credits :
DUKE ELLINGTON AND HIS ORCHESTRA – 1950 | The Classics Chronological Series – 1217 (2001) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
Eight of the selections on this interesting CD feature Duke Ellington and Billy Strayhorn on pianos, with backup work by either Wendell Marshall or Joe Shulman on bass plus an unidentified drummer on a few numbers. Among the more notable selections are "Cotton Tail," "C Jam Blues," "Johnny Come Lately," and particularly a wild version of "Tonk." These performances are easily available on Prestige, while the other numbers have mostly been put out by Columbia. The latter's big-band selections include the initial studio recording of "The Tattooed Bride" and a lengthy exploration (utilizing Yvonne Lanauze's wordless vocals) of "Mood Indigo." This is rewarding music, but one might want to acquire these numbers through Prestige and Sony/Columbia instead, where they fit more into specific concepts. Scott Yanow Tracklist + Credits :
DUKE ELLINGTON AND HIS ORCHESTRA – 1950-1951 | The Classics Chronological Series – 1258 (2002) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
Volume 40 in the complete sequential recordings of Duke Ellington, as compiled and reissued in 2002 as part of the Classics Chronological Series, covers about a half-year's time from December 18, 1950 to May 24, 1951, beginning with two extended tracks initially issued on the Columbia LP Masterpieces by Ellington. With Sophisticated Lady and Solitude, Ellington took advantage of the new long-playing format to allow the band to stretch out as they'd been doing in live performance for many years. The vocalist on Sophisticated Lady was Yvonne Lanauze. In addition to the usual rich palette of Ellington and Strayhorn compositions, this portion of the chronology contains original works by trumpeters Charlie Shavers and William "Cat" Anderson; by valve trombonist and arranger Juan Tizol, tenor saxophonist Paul Gonsalves, and Luigi Paulino Alfredo Francesco Antonio Balassoni, commonly known as drummer Louie Bellson, who had recently migrated from the Harry James Orchestra with Tizol and alto saxophonist Willie Smith. The music heard on this disc was recorded at a time when all of the big bands -- even those led by Count Basie and Duke Ellington -- were struggling to keep their heads above water. This explains the inclusion of seven selections that were released on Mercer records -- a short-lived independent label managed by Mercer Ellington, and Leonard Feather -- featuring a scaled down group known as Duke Ellington's Coronets. The titles credited to the Coronets are "Night Walk (Cat Walk)," "Moonlight Fiesta," "She (Sensuous)," "Swamp Drum," "Sultry Serenade," "Indian Summer," and the "Britt and Butter Blues" which referred to a pair of master trombonists, Britt Woodman and Quentin "Butter" Jackson. arwulf arwulf Tracklist + Credits :
DUKE ELLINGTON AND HIS ORCHESTRA – 1951 | The Classics Chronological Series – 1282 (2003) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
Volume 41 in the complete chronological recordings of Duke Ellington as reissued by the Classics label contains 16 master takes that came together during the second half of 1951, the year that saw the release of Duke's marvelous Uptown album. Although big bands were struggling to stay together during this period and Johnny Hodges was off making records with producer Norman Granz, the Ellington Orchestra sounds exceptionally fine throughout. Billy Strayhorn had a lot to do with the elegance that characterizes the 1951 recordings, and the soloists are in extraordinarily good form. "Deep Night" features trombonists Juan Tizol, Quentin "Butter" Jackson, and Britt Woodman. "Please Be Kind" belongs to alto saxophonist Willie Smith, an alumnus of the Jimmie Lunceford Orchestra. The "Duet" between bassist Wendell Marshall and clarinetist Jimmy Hamilton is mostly an orchestral number that ends as a duo. Hamilton also plays tenor sax on "Bensonality." "Jumpin' with Symphony Sid," a tune rarely associated with Ellington, here becomes a solid steady groove that you'll want to slip into more than once. "Before My Time" from the "Controversial Suite" was Duke's whimsical response to the language of music critics who used up a lot of energy defining Tradition and Modernity; the Suite's title also referred to the flashy progressivism of Stan Kenton. The vocalist on "Blues at Sundown" is Jimmy Grissom, a steady customer who also handles Strayhorn's "Something to Live For" and "Azalea," a love song that Ellington claimed to have designed for Louis Armstrong, who subsequently recorded it with Duke about ten years later on that utterly essential Roulette album, The Great Summit. arwulf arwulf Tracklist + Credits :
16.10.23
DUKE ELLINGTON AND HIS ORCHESTRA – 1953, Vol. 2 | The Classics Chronological Series – 1434 (2007) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
During the month of December 1953, Duke Ellington made records for the Capitol label in Chicago and New York with a trio, a quartet, and the full-sized orchestra. Volume 45 in the Ellington stratum of the Classics Chronological Series makes available 21 selections from this wonderfully creative chapter in the lives of the Duke and his men. Seldom, if ever, have the big band and small group recordings from this segment of Ellington's career been reissued in chronological sequence. Over the years, for some reason, the titles "Montevideo" and "Night Time" have both been applied to the thrilling piece of work heard on track two. Inspired by the largest city in the country of Uruguay, this passionate Latin jazz workout is enlivened by the conga drumming of Ralph Collier. Track 20, accurately titled "Night Time," is a gorgeous nocturne written in collaboration with Billy Strayhorn. Tracks four, five, six, eleven and sixteen feature vocals by Jimmy Grissom, and trumpeter/violinist Ray Nance sings "Just A-Settin' and A-Rockin'." Those who desire the complete 1953 trio recordings of Duke Ellington (including the conga-driven quartet recording of "Montevideo") should most definitely seek out the Capitol album Piano Reflections. arwulf arwulf Tracklist + Credits :
13.9.23
BEN WEBSTER – 1953-1954 | The Chronogical Classics – 1458 (2008) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
Almost 25 years into his recording career, tenor saxophonist Ben Webster made a series of studio recordings under the supervision of producer Norman Granz. These marvelous performances were reissued in chronological sequence by the Classics label in 2008. Each volume of Ben Webster on Classics is richly packed with satisfying ballads, blues, and swing. This installment borders between superb and divine. Three titles recorded for Mercury on January 22, 1953, find Webster soloing in front of an orchestra conducted by Johnny Richards, a student of Arnold Schoenberg who served as an arranger for Stan Kenton. Recorded at sessions that took place in April and December 1953, tracks four through 12 were originally released on the Norgran album King of the Tenors. The collective personnel from these dates is typical of the Granz "embarrassment of riches" approach, for here were trumpeter Harry "Sweets" Edison, alto saxophonist Benny Carter, pianist Oscar Peterson, guitarists Barney Kessel and Herb Ellis, bassist Ray Brown, and drummer J.C. Heard. Tracks 13-16 were recorded on March 30, 1954, with the assistance of pianist Teddy Wilson, bassist Ray Brown, and drummers Alvin Stoller and Jo Jones. This material, along with the rest of the titles on the collection, formed the Verve album Music for Loving. On tracks 17-21, Ben Webster interprets sensuous ballads backed by the Ralph Burns Orchestra. In addition to a string section, the ensemble included clarinetist Tony Scott, bassist George Duvivier, drummer Louis Bellson, and composer/pianist/arranger Billy Strayhorn. arwulf arwulf Tracklist :
13.4.23
TYREE GLENN – 1947-1952 (2006) The Classics Chronological Series – 1420 | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
Tyree Glenn, who had the unusual double of trombone and vibes, was an important asset at various times to both Duke Ellington and Louis Armstrong. Glenn started out working in territory bands in Virginia, then moved to the West Coast, playing with groups headed by Charlie Echols (1936) and Eddie Barefield. After playing with Ethel Waters and Benny Carter, he became a longtime member of the Cab Calloway Orchestra (1939-1946). Glenn visited Europe with Don Redman's big band (1946). During his association with Ellington (1947-1951), he was an effective wah-wah trombonist in the Tricky Sam Nanton tradition and Ellington's only vibraphonist, being well-featured on the "Liberian Suite." During the 1950s, Glenn worked in the studios, led his quartet at the Embers, and freelanced in swing and Dixieland settings. Other than some European dates in 1947, Glenn's only extensive opportunity to record was for Roulette (1957-1958 and 1961-1962). During 1965-1968, he toured the world with Louis Armstrong's All-Stars. After leaving Armstrong, Tyree Glenn led his own group during his last few years. Scott Yanow
Tracklist :
1 Mad Monk 2:41
2 Please Don't Talk About Me When I'm Gone 2:50
3 The Hour Of Parting 3:26
4 I Can't Get Started 2:38
5 Billie's Bounce 2:52
6 I Surrender, Dear 3:12
7 Humoresque 3:14
8 Always 3:14
9 Poor Butterfly 3:07
10 My Melancholy Baby 3:00
11 My Melancholy Baby 2:59
12 Sweet Lorraine 3:03
13 Limehouse Blues 2:43
14 Always 2:44
15 Sultry Serenade 3:07
16 Dusty Serenade 2:46
17 Tell Me Why 2:43
18 The Little White Cloud That Cried 2:31
19 Wrap Your Troubles In Dreams 2:28
20 Sugar 2:39
21 Sidewalks Of New York 2:59
22 How Could You Do A Thing Like That 2:30
26.10.22
JOHNNY HODGES - The Complete Verve Johnny Hodges Small Group Sessions - 1956-1961 (2000) 6xCD BOX-SET | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
Johnny Hodges was Duke Ellington's most important soloist, so when the alto saxophonist returned to his former employer in the fall of 1955 after leading his own band for just over four and a half years, he had Ellington's approval to record under his own name for Verve on a steady basis. This limited-edition box set collects all of Hodges' small-group sessions recorded for Verve between 1956 and 1961 (excepting some selections whose masters were lost), often with a number of sidemen on loan from Ellington. The leader's chops are best exhibited in the ballads and blues features, though his originals merit attention, too. Hodges hardly hogs the spotlight; he obviously takes his share of solos but generously features his guests and associates from the Ellington band. A nonet with Clark Terry, Ray Nance, Quentin Jackson, Jimmy Hamilton, Harry Carney, Billy Strayhorn, Jimmy Woode, and Sam Woodyard is easily the best all-around session within this compilation, with many fine tracks. The humorous "Just Squeeze Me," with Nance's hip vocals complemented by Terry's talkative horn in the background, as well as a surprising extended workout of "Take the 'A' Train," with Terry taking over the famous solo spotlight that Nance first recorded in 1941 (heard on flügelhorn) and followed by Nance on his swinging violin, are among its highlights. Some of the other veterans appearing in this collection include Roy Eldridge, Vic Dickenson, Ben Webster, and Herb Ellis. The atmosphere of each session is friendly and swinging, with the feeling that each take came together quickly, whether or not that was actually the case. While Johnny Hodges' recordings as a leader from this period never rivaled Duke Ellington's in either sales or critical acclaim, they proved to be consistently enjoyable and able to stand the test of time. The set includes 30 previously unissued tracks. The detailed liner notes and discography, along with the numerous photos, also help to make The Complete Verve Johnny Hodges Small Group Sessions 1956-1961 an essential purchase for swing fans, though it is a limited edition of just 7,500, so it is guaranteed to soar in value. It is available exclusively from www.mosaicrecords.com.
Ken Dryden
All Tracks & Credits
25.10.22
JOHNNY HODGES AN HIS ORCHESTRA - 1945-1950 {CC, 1189} (2001) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
John Cornelius Hodges began working with Duke Ellington in 1928 and soon became one of the prime voices in the Ellington orchestra. Hodges began leading his own recording ensembles -- actually scaled-down versions of Duke's band -- in 1937. Occasionally sitting in with other leaders like Lionel Hampton, Hodges also led groups of his own, including a quartet at New York's Apollo Club during the summer of 1948 and five of the six bands heard on this first volume of his complete recordings in chronological order. (All records issued under Hodges' name prior to 1947 have been included in the massive Classics chronology of Duke Ellington.) Sandy Williams' Big Eight was one of many ensembles recording for the Hot Record Society -- and one of the very best of them. "Mountain Air" and "After Hours on Dream Street" are slow, smooth, languid, and lovely, with Hodges playing pretty for the people. "Sumpin' Jumpin' Round Here" is a smart strut with a hint of Latin American rhythm built into its caboose. Harry Carney, who fortunately appears on fully half of the recordings reissued here, does some friendly nudging with his horn on this pleasantly stimulating dance tune. "Chili con Carney" is a light bounce honoring the baritone saxophonist without granting him any more solo space than a couple of brief breaks. The next four selections appeared on the small and ephemeral Wax label in 1947. Carney is roundly featured on Jerome Kern's moody existential opus "Why Was I Born?," and Hodges softly interprets Walter Donaldson's "You're Driving Me Crazy" in what must be one of the slowest and most gentle versions of this song ever recorded. "Key Largo" carries a whiff of the Caribbean in its dulcet tones and lapping rhythm. Billy Strayhorn's "Triple Play" is marvelously cool mood music, elegantly rendered by a quintet with the composer at the piano. When Hodges recorded for the Mercer and Sunrise labels, he included longtime Ellington trombonist Lawrence Brown, Chick Webb's star trumpeter Taft Jordan, up-and-coming tenor saxophonist Al Sears, and a rhythm section of Billy Strayhorn, Oscar Pettiford, and trombonist Wilbur DeParis sitting in on the drums! Each performance is a delight. "A Flower Is a Lovesome Thing" is the classic Strayhorn/Hodges still life. "Longhorn Blues" and "Faraway Blues" both feel like close cousins to "Jeep's Blues." On the second Mercer session Harry Carney replaces Brown, Harold "Shorty" Baker is the trumpeter, and Sonny Greer does wonderful things with the drums. Anyone who wants to hear Strayhorn cook a little on the piano should check out the groove track "Searsy's Blues," which is somewhat of an advanced approach to a boogie. Its tempo reappears exactly on "Let the Zoomers Drool" -- a "zoomer" being hip vernacular for a mooch. Years later, Dave Frishberg liked "A Little Taste" so much that he composed some of his funniest lyrics based on its nonchalant contours. This satisfying CD ends with the first of Hodges' Parisian sessions from 1950, with Raymond Fol sitting in with a pack of Ellingtonians when Duke declined to participate for contractual reasons. These tracks are notable for the presence of trombone ace Quentin "Butter" Jackson and voluntary expatriate tenor saxophonist Don Byas, who blows a splintering run during the crackling strut "We Fooled You." arwulf arwulf
Tracklist :
1 Mountain Air 3'02
Cat Anderson / Tab Smith
2 Sumpin' Jumpin' Round Here 3'00
Brick Fleagle
3 After Hours on Dream Street 3'20
Brick Fleagle
4 Chili con Carney 2'38
Harry Carney
5 Key Largo 2'37
Benny Carter / Lou Carter / Karl Suessdorf / Leah Worth
6 You're Driving Me Crazy 2'53
Walter Donaldson
7 Why Was I Born? 3'12
Oscar Hammerstein II / Jerome Kern
8 Triple Play 2'42
Billy Strayhorn
9 Who Struck John? 2'51
Duke Ellington / Johnny Hodges
10 It Shouldn't Happen to a Dream 3'03
Duke Ellington / Don George / Johnny Hodges
11 June's Jumpin' 2'48
Johnny Hodges
12 Violet Blue 3'05
Billy Strayhorn
13 A Flower Is a Lovesome Thing 2'53
Billy Strayhorn
14 Frisky 4'48
Duke Ellington / Johnny Hodges
15 Longhorn Blues 2'50
Duke Ellington / Johnny Hodges
16 Far Away Blues 2'53
Duke Ellington / Johnny Hodges
17 Searsy's Blues 2'44
Duke Ellington / Johnny Hodges
18 A Little Taste 3'08
Cannonball Adderley / Duke Ellington / Johnny Hodges
19 Let the Zoomers Drool 3'00
Duke Ellington / Johnny Hodges
20 Charlotte Russe 3'08
Johnny Hodges
21 St. Germain-des-Prés Blues 3'22
Don Byas
22 Good to the Last Drop 3'13
Gene Page
23 Only Wish I Knew 3'06
Don Byas / Raymond Fol
24 We Fooled You 2'46
Harold Baker / Johnny Hodges
JOHNNY HODGES AND HIS ORCHESTRA - 1950-1951 (2002) The Classics Chronological Series – 1248 | FLAC (tracks), lossless
Johnny Hodges' 1950 Parisian Vogue recordings -- augmented here with four sides waxed in Copenhagen for the Danish Tono label -- form a prologue to the records Hodges would make with Norman Granz from 1951-1955. The band heard on the first five tracks was essentially a condensed Ellington group with Don Byas sitting in and Raymond Fol at the piano. "Last Leg Blues" is a saucy, loping exercise in two parts that incorporates at one point a lick from "Tuxedo Junction." This is a good example of what seems at first like an almost too simple musical idea bearing incredible fruit, Jimmy Hamilton's clarinet and Hodges' alto working it up handsomely into an impressive exploration of the blues. Composed by Hamilton, the feisty, bop-like "Nix It, Mix It" is one of the most exciting tracks included here. "Time on My Hands" feels like an oasis of lyrical familiarity among so many relatively uncomplicated melodies designed for jamming rather than reflection. Hamilton, Byas, and Hodges communicate wonderfully during this gorgeous ballad. Three of the four Danish recordings feature vocalist Chubby Kemp, whose slightly nasal voice sounds like Anita Love or maybe even Little Esther Phillips if she'd sung jazz. "Tea for Two" is a pleasant surprise, with Hamilton's clarinet sending up bubbles over Quentin "Butter" Jackson's mellifluous trombone during the opening. Hodges and Hamilton both deliver spirited solos and the antiquated Vincent Youmans confection grows into something intricate, ornate, and exhilarating. Back in Paris with the band scaled down to a sextet, Hodges led his men through a stunning rendition of Juan Tizol's "Perdido," eased them into "Mood Indigo," "Sweet Lorraine," and the 19th century melody "In the Shade of the Old Apple Tree," here rendered into a smooth, cool exercise in swing. "Rendez-Vous at the Hot Club" moves briskly and swings hard. With the session of January 15, 1951, Hodges was back on American soil, initiating a collaborative relationship with producer Norman Granz that would continue through 1955 and occasionally rekindle over the years. According to Stanley Dance, "You Blew Out the Flame in My Heart" was given the erroneous title "Rabbit's Blues" in an early recording ledger, and the misnomer continues to resurface in discographies to this very day. Over the next five years, Hodges would record an enormous amount of material for the Mercury, Clef, and Norgran labels, often relying upon tenor saxophonist Al Sears to help steer the operation as the music evolved into relative modernity while rooted in strong elements of blues, ballads, and swing. arwulf arwulf
1 Jump, That's All 3'38
Harold Baker
2 Last Legs Blues, Pt. 1 3'09
Johnny Hodges
3 Last Legs Blues, Pt. 2 3'02
Johnny Hodges
4 Nix It, Mix It 3'22
Jimmy Hamilton
5 Time on My Hands 3'22
Harold Adamson / Mack Gordon / Vincent Youmans
6 Run About 3'07
Johnny Hodges
7 Wishing and Waiting 3'27
Johnny Hodges
8 Get That Geet 3'22
Johnny Hodges
9 That's Grand 3'28
Johnny Hodges
10 Skip It 3'21
Johnny Hodges
11 Mellow Mood 3:18
Flandrake / Williams
12 How I Wish I Was Around 3:29
Flandrake
13 I Met a Guy 3:09
Connors / Flandrake
14 Tea for Two 3'18
Irving Caesar / Vincent Youmans
15 Perdido 3'06
Ervin Drake / Hans Lengsfelder / Juan Tizol
16 In the Shade of the Old Apple Tree 3'42
Egbert VanAlstyne / Harry Williams
17 Mood Indigo 3'47
Barney Bigard / Duke Ellington / Irving Mills
18 Sweet Lorraine 3'11
Clifford R. Burwell / Mitchell Parish
19 Rendez-Vous at the Hot Club 3'05
Traditional
20 Hop, Skip and Jump 2'29
Duke Ellington
21 Rabbit's Blues (You Blew Out the Flame in My Heart) 3'37
Johnny Hodges
22 Something to Pat Your Foot To 2'55
Al Sears
23 Blue Fantasia 3'13
Johnny Hodges
24 My Reward 3'09
Duke Ellington
JOHNNY HODGES AN HIS ORCHESTRA - 1951-1952 {CC, 1389} (2005) FLAC (tracks), lossless
Between January 1951 and August 1955, alto saxophonist Johnny Hodges took an extended vacation from Duke Ellington and led his own ensembles in a remarkably fruitful series of recording sessions produced by Norman Granz. Volume three in the Classics Johnny Hodges chronology opens with four outstanding tracks cut on February 28, 1951. Since Hodges was still drawing a salary from Ellington during the session that took place on January 15, these are the first recordings he made as an independent artist after severing the professional umbilicus that had tethered him to Duke's orchestra since the late '20s. Johnny Hodges was one of Ellington's cardinal voices, and musically, they more or less grew up together; even when technically separated, both men continued to make music that reflected a glowing spectrum of shared sensibilities. Most of the Hodges/Granz bands were peppered with Ellingtonians, and several are in evidence here; trombonist Lawrence Brown, drummer Sonny Greer, Billy Strayhorn sitting in at the piano on "Globe Trotter" and tenor man Al Sears serving as "musical director" and booking agent. The session of March 3, 1951 opened with "Castle Rock," Searsy's gutsy self-portrait in R&B that made it onto entertainment industry charts and into jukeboxes for a little while as a "hit." The rest of these recordings were fated to exist as they do today -- as excellent music suspended in an amorphous category stamped with the word "jazz"; marginalized by a mainstream pop culture obsessed with star vocalists, specious spectacle and anything pasted over with the meaningless word "new." These recordings made by a series of septets under the leadership of Johnny Hodges in New York and San Francisco during 1951 and 1952, feature (in addition to the artists already mentioned) such able practitioners as trumpeter Emmett Berry, saxophonist Flip Phillips, bassist Red Callender, drummer J.C. Heard and Ellington vocalist Al Hibbler -- and these timeless performances still await wider recognition. arwulf arwulf
Tracklist :
1 Good Queen Bass 3:05
Johnny Hodges
2 Jeep's Blues 2:59
Ellington, Hodges
3 Solitude 2:56
Eddie DeLange / Duke Ellington / Irving Mills
4 The Jeep Is Jumping 2:50
Ellington, Hodges
5 Castle Rock 2:53
Al Sears
6 Sophisticated Lady 3:11
Duke Ellington / Irving Mills / Mitchell Parish
7 Globe Trotter 3:05
Hodges
8 Gentle Breeze 3:16
Sears
9 Sideways 3:04
Lovett
10 A Pound of Blues 3:11
Lovett
11 Wham 3:04
Hodges
12 Who's Excited 3:05
Mercer / Hodges
13 Sweeping the Blues Away 3:19
Ellington, Hodges
14 Day Dream 3:21
Ellington, Latouche, Strayhorn
15 Standing Room Only 2:50
Hodges
16 Below the Azores 3:06
Lovett
17 Tenderly 3:21
Walter Gross / Jack Lawrence
18 Sweet Georgia Brown 6:01
Ben Bernie / Kenneth Casey / Maceo Pinkard
19 Duke's Blues 6:09
Hodges
20 Tea for Two 3:02
Irving Caesar / Vincent Youmans
21 This Is My Night to Love 3:04
Ford
22 What I'm Gotchere 3:23
The Cue
Credits :
Billy Strayhorn Piano
Lloyd Trotman Bass
Anatol Schenker Liner Notes
Barney Richmond Bass
Lawrence D. Brown Trombone
Sonny Greer Drums
Emmett Berry Trumpet
Red Callender Bass
J.C. Heard Drums
Leroy Lovett Piano, Celeste
Al Hibbler Violin, Vocals
Johnny Hodges Sax (Alto)
Flip Phillips Sax (Tenor)
Al Sears Sax (Tenor)
JOHNNY HODGES - The Jeep Is Jumpin' (2003) 4xCD BOX-SET | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
With or without Duke Ellington, Johnny Hodges was always an elemental Ellingtonian, for Hodges' tone and technique were essential components of the Ellington sound and style. Released in 2003 as Proper Box 58, The Jeep Is Jumpin' samples the saxophonist's studio output during the years 1937-1956. After a tour of Hodges' first sessions as a leader and a well-rounded sampling of his best recordings from the '40s, Proper samples his Parisian Vogue sessions of 1950, and closes the set with 20 neatly executed studies in early modern mainstream jazz overseen by producer Norman Granz. 14 of the 95 tracks feature vocalists from the late '30s, and most of these occur on the first disc.
While the period pop tunes sung by Buddy Clark, Mary McHugh, Leon La Fell, and Jean Eldridge constitute valuable evidence of the saxophonist's skill as an accompanist, this collection's instrumental tracks really illuminate his unparalleled genius as composer, interpreter, balladeer and improviser. Beginning with "Wanderlust" (December 1938), Hodges' personality begins to manifest ever more profoundly, and the plot thickens during the 1939 stratum at the beginning of Disc Two, with the arrival of Billy Strayhorn and bassist Jimmy Blanton. "Finesse (Night Wind)" and "You're Driving Me Crazy" are fairly uncommon instances of Hodges accompanied only by bass and piano. "Good Queen Bess" and "That's the Blues, Old Man" are distillations of his personality and temperament, while "Passion Flower" and "A Flower Is a Lovesome Thing" epitomize the kind of lushly sensuous music that Strayhorn wrote with him in mind. In 1947, Hodges cut a series of excellent records for the Sunrise and Mercer labels, including his masterpiece "A Little Taste" and "Let the Zoomers Drool," a zoomer being postwar slang for a mooch.
There are 14 examples on this collection of music recorded in Paris during the spring and early summer of 1950 by Hodges and a group of Ellingtonians, with tenor saxophonist Don Byas sitting in on "Jump That's All," "Last Leg Blues," "Nix It Mix It," and "Time on My Hands." The other tenor who pops up throughout the second half of the set is Al Sears, who is featured on "Searsy's Blues" and the punchy "Castle Rock." The last 20 tracks in this collection were cut in New York during 1951-1956 under the supervision of Norman Granz, and in many cases feature the trumpet of Emmett Berry. Here Hodges had a chance to stretch out and do his own thing at some distance from Ellington's immediate orbit. The combination of late-‘30s material, strong choices from the '40s, highlights from Hodges' visit to Paris in 1950, and the cream of his early Norman Granz sessions places this set among the best of the Johnny Hodges collections, and well among the strongest entries in the Proper catalog. arwulf arwulf
Disc One: Hodge Podge
Disc Two: Day Dream
Disc Three: A Flower Is A Lovesome Thing
Disc Four: Castle Rock
All Tracks & Credits :
JOHNNY HODGES AND HIS ORCHESTRA - Not So Dukish (1958) lp | FLAC (tracks), lossless
SIDE A
1 M.H.R. 5'56
Written-By – Billy Strayhorn, Johnny Hodges
2 Broadway Babe 2'40
Written-By – Johnny Hodges, Mercer Ellington
3 Three And Six 2'18
Written-By – Billy Strayhorn
4 Not So Dukish 7'48
Written-By – Jimmy Woode
SIDE B
1 Central Park Swing 3'22
Written-By – Jimmy Hamilton
2 Preacher Blues 8:20
Written-By – Johnny Hodges
3 Jeep Bounced Back 3:30
Written-By – Johnny Hodges
4 The Last Time I Saw Paris 2'45
Written-By – Jerome Kern, Oscar Hammerstein II
Credits :
Alto Saxophone – Johnny Hodges
Bass – Jimmy Woode
Clarinet – Jimmy Hamilton
Drums – Sam Woodyard
Liner Notes – Leonard Feather
Piano – Billy Strayhorn
Tenor Saxophone – Ben Webster
Trombone – Lawrence Brown
Trumpet – Ray Nance, Roy Eldridge
24.10.22
JOHNNY HODGES AND THE ELLINGTON MEN - The Big Sound (1957-2010) FLAC (tracks), lossless
Tracklist :
1 Don't Call Me, I'll Call You 3:31
Composed By – Anderson
2 An Ordinary Thing 3:32
Composed By – Anderson
3 Waiting For Duke 3:54
Composed By – Anderson
4 Dust Bowl 4:26
Composed By – Hodges
5 Little Rabbit Blues 9:23
Composed By – Hodges
6 Viscount 2:30
Composed By – Hodges, M. Ellington
7 Johnny Come Lately 2:26
Composed By – Strayhorn
8 Bouquet Of Roses 3:24
Composed By – Hodges, M. Ellington
9 Gone And Crazy 3:13
Composed By – Hodges
10 Digits 4:19
Composed By – Terry
11 Segdoh 3:27
Composed By – Hodges
12 Early Morning Rock 3:36
Composed By – Hodges
- BONUS TRACKS -
13 Hi ´Ya 3:11
14 Snibor 7:17
15 I´m Gonna Sit Right Down And Write Myself A Letter 3:30
16 Texas Blues 11:47
Tracks 1-4 :
Bass – Jimmy Woode
Drums – Sam Woodyard
Piano – Billy Strayhorn
Reeds – Harry Carney, Jimmy Hamilton, Johnny Hodges, Paul Gonsalves, Russell Procope
Trombone – Britt Woodman, John Sanders, Quentin Jackson
Trumpet – Cat Anderson, Clark Terry, Harold Baker, Ray Nance, Willie Cook
Tracks 6, 8, 10 & 12 : Same session as above. Omit Cook, Anderson, Woodman & Sanders
Tracks 5, 7, 9 & 11 : Clark Terry (tp), Ray Nance (tp, vln), Quentin Jackson, Britt Woodman, John Sanders (tb), Russel Procope (cl, as), Jimmy Hamilton (ts, cl), Harry Carney (bar), Billy Strayhorn (p), Jimmy Woode (b), Sam Woodyard (d), New York, June 26, 1957.
* Bonus Tracks 13-16 : Ray Nance (tp), Lawrence Brown (tb), Jimmy Hamilton (cl, as), Harry Carney (bar), Billy Stayhorn (p), Jimmy Woode (b), Sam Woodyard (d), New York, January 11, 1956.
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