Take Five: A Weekly Jazz Sampler
Duke's Men: Ellington's Loyal Improvisers
Duke Ellington (left of center) poses with some of his sidemen in 1946, including Junior Raglin, Lawrence Brown, Johnny Hodges, Ray Nance, Sonny Greer, Fred Guy and Harry Carney.
Duke Ellington (left of center) poses with some of his sidemen in 1946, including Junior Raglin, Lawrence Brown, Johnny Hodges, Ray Nance, Sonny Greer, Fred Guy and Harry Carney.
William Gottlieb/Library of Congress via FlickrEvery successful big band leader featured brilliant soloists: Count Basie had Lester Young, Fletcher Henderson had Coleman Hawkins, Benny Goodman had Gene Krupa. But the Maestro, Duke Ellington, spotlighted his men apart from the rest.
Ellington's soloists captured the spirit of his music. He wrote concertos, short- and long-form tunes, with his musicians in mind, allowing for their personality to shape the structure of the music. He specifically targeted his musicians' strengths — Johnny Hodges' seductiveness, Cootie Williams' bravado, Tricky Sam Nanton's humor — and accentuated those attributes. That's why musicians remained so loyal to him over the years, even at the expense of their own fame. He understood them and brought the best out of their playing. These tunes remind us why.
Duke's Men: Ellington's Loyal Improvisers
Cootie Williams
- Artist: Duke Ellington
- Album: Great Paris Concert [Atlantic]
- Song: Echoes of Harlem [Live][*]
If you distinguished yourself enough in Ellington's orchestra, you may have gotten a tune (or two) named after you. Trumpeter Cootie Williams, who was the heir to Bubber Miley with the plunger, was so fortunate. He got two nods from The Maestro with "Tutti for Cootie" and, more famously, "Concerto for Cootie." "Concerto for Cootie" later evolved into another Williams showcase, "Echoes of Harlem." All three Williams features are on this recording, which demonstrate the perfect balance a jazz orchestra can have with an individual player.
Johnny Hodges
- Artist: Duke Ellington
- Album: Ellington at Newport
- Song: Jeep's Blues
Duke Ellington was a genius of form, a master of composition in the 20th century, but how he elevated a simple blues to high art was mind-boggling. His treatment of "Jeep's Blues," named after one of his most important soloists of any era — Johnny Hodges — was deeply restrained. He left plenty of room for Hodges to bend notes to the heavens, allowing for the true gospel of the blues to shine down. The gods must have aligned at the 1956 Newport Jazz Festival, where Ellington professed his career "reborn." This best-selling record helped jump-start it again.
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