Duke Ellington Orchestra: Liederhalle Stuttgart 1967

Rating: ★★★★

Record and Artist Details

Musicians:

Cat Anderson (t)
Rufus Jones (d)
Harry Carney (bs)
John Lamb (b)
Jimmy Hamilton (cl, ts)
Mercer Ellington (t)
Cootie Williams (t)
ChuckConnors (tb)
Buster Cooper (tb)
Duke Ellington (p)
Russell Procope (reeds)
Paul Gonsalves (reeds)
Herbie Jones (t)
Lawrence Brown (tb)
Johnny Hodges (as)

Label:

Jazzhaus

April/2020

Media Format:

CD

Catalogue Number:

JAH-403

RecordDate:

March 1967

The Duke Ellington Orchestra’s European tour of 1967 has already generated a generous spread of bootleg discs, but perhaps none of them as vibrantly recorded as this Stuttgart concert from 6 March. Matters do not, however, get off to a promising start. An unkempt 50-second scrap of ‘Take The “A” Train’ just about hangs together – before the curtain rises on the orchestra’s true glories. For those of us who adore ‘Rockin’ In Rhythm’, ‘Perdido’, et al, but have enough versions on our shelves, the main attraction here is the unusual programme. Following a sprightly trot through ‘Johnny Come Lately’, the orchestra bounces into ‘Swamp Goo’, a tune that appears to owe its chord voicings and orchestral colours to ‘The Mooche’, even as Russell Procope’s soulful clarinet nudges it into another direction. ‘A Chromatic Love Affair’, a ballad worthy of ‘The Single Petal Of A Rose’, finds Harry Carney swimming deep through fleet-of-foot modulations and whole-tone scales, floating against the harmonic anchors. The final piece, ‘Kixx’, is a close cousin of ‘Diminuendo and Crescendo in Blue’ and the intensity of Rufus Jones’ solo sends the crowd home on a high. ‘Kixx’ also highlights what a hard-driven, funky band Ellington had in 1967, with raw-boned brass stabs and trenchant saxophones that could easily have given James Brown a run for his money. An exceptional Ducal night.

Follow us

Jazzwise Print

  • Latest print issues

From £5.83 / month

Subscribe

Jazzwise Digital Club

  • Latest digital issues
  • Digital archive since 1997
  • Download tracks from bonus compilation albums during the year
  • Reviews Database access

From £7.42 / month

Subscribe

Subscribe from only £5.83

Never miss an issue of the UK's biggest selling jazz magazine.

Subscribe

View the Current
Issue

Take a peek inside the latest issue of Jazzwise magazine.

Find out more