
Ellington Uptown
[[Release Detail]][[Release Description]]
Even back in the early â50s, Columbia Records took Duke Ellington seriously enough to place this album on its prestigious Masterworks label, heretofore reserved mostly for highbrow classical music and Broadway shows. Also, this LP explodes the critical line that the early â50s was a relatively fallow period for the Duke; any of these smoking, concert-length tracks will torpedo that notion. The young Louis Bellson was powering the Ellington band at that time, and his revolutionary double-bass drum technique and rare ability to build coherent drum solos are put to astounding use on his self-penned leadoff track, âSkin Deep,â which was quite a demonstration piece for audiophiles at the time.
Old favorites from the Ellington hit parade are given extended treatments, with singer Betty Roche taking the A-train for a bebop-flavored ride, âThe Moocheâ spotlighting clarinetists Jimmy Hamilton and Russell Procope, and Ellingtonâs boogie-woogie piano kicking off a super-charged âPerdidoâ for trumpeter Clark Terry. The centerpiece of the disc is a sharply drawn, idiomatically swinging, probably unbeatable performance of âA Tone Parallel to Harlemâ that lays waste to any of the âsymphonicâ versions that turn up frequently at pop concerts. Another feature of this record is the great sound quality, a benefit of being entrusted to Columbiaâs best engineers. Richard S. Ginell/AMG
[[Selling Points]]
- Remastered at Columbia Records
- Features old favorites from Ellington, including âThe Moocheâ
- LP x 1 standard sleeve
[[Catalog Number]]PPAN ML4639[[Artist]]Duke Ellington & His Orchestra
Original: $27.00
-70%$27.00
$8.10Product Information
Product Information
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Description
[[Release Detail]][[Release Description]]
Even back in the early â50s, Columbia Records took Duke Ellington seriously enough to place this album on its prestigious Masterworks label, heretofore reserved mostly for highbrow classical music and Broadway shows. Also, this LP explodes the critical line that the early â50s was a relatively fallow period for the Duke; any of these smoking, concert-length tracks will torpedo that notion. The young Louis Bellson was powering the Ellington band at that time, and his revolutionary double-bass drum technique and rare ability to build coherent drum solos are put to astounding use on his self-penned leadoff track, âSkin Deep,â which was quite a demonstration piece for audiophiles at the time.
Old favorites from the Ellington hit parade are given extended treatments, with singer Betty Roche taking the A-train for a bebop-flavored ride, âThe Moocheâ spotlighting clarinetists Jimmy Hamilton and Russell Procope, and Ellingtonâs boogie-woogie piano kicking off a super-charged âPerdidoâ for trumpeter Clark Terry. The centerpiece of the disc is a sharply drawn, idiomatically swinging, probably unbeatable performance of âA Tone Parallel to Harlemâ that lays waste to any of the âsymphonicâ versions that turn up frequently at pop concerts. Another feature of this record is the great sound quality, a benefit of being entrusted to Columbiaâs best engineers. Richard S. Ginell/AMG
[[Selling Points]]
- Remastered at Columbia Records
- Features old favorites from Ellington, including âThe Moocheâ
- LP x 1 standard sleeve
[[Catalog Number]]PPAN ML4639[[Artist]]Duke Ellington & His Orchestra


















