The Greatest Jazz Concert in the World
The Greatest Jazz Concert in the World | ||||
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Live album by Various artists | ||||
Released | 1975 | |||
Recorded | March 26, 1967, Carnegie Hall, New York City, July 1, 1967, Hollywood Bowl, Los Angeles, California | |||
Genre | Jazz | |||
Length | 182:09 | |||
Label | Pablo | |||
Producer | Norman Granz | |||
Duke Ellington chronology | ||||
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The Greatest Jazz Concert in the World is a 1967 live album featuring Duke Ellington and his orchestra, Ella Fitzgerald, Oscar Peterson, T-Bone Walker, Coleman Hawkins, Clark Terry and Zoot Sims. It was released in 1975.[1]
Billy Strayhorn's "Blood Count" was debuted at the Carnegie Hall concert featured on the album. It was Strayhorn's last composition; he died a few months after the piece was recorded.[2]
The album marked the last recorded collaboration between Fitzgerald and Ellington and his orchestra.
The album contains the last recordings of Coleman Hawkins. During the opening of "Sweet Georgia Brown" Hawkins can be heard to say "I guess I've gotta go through with it". Then someone replies "That's right".
Reception
Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [1] |
The AllMusic review by Scott Yanow noted: "In addition to having a somewhat immodest title, this three-CD set was not actually one single concert but two...the music on the reissue is often quite special...Maybe this really was 'the Greatest Jazz Concert' after all".[1]
Track listing
Disc One
- "Smedley" (Oscar Peterson) – 4:16
- "Some Day My Prince Will Come" (Frank Churchill, Larry Morey) – 4:59
- "Daytrain" (Peterson) – 5:53
- "Now's the Time" (Charlie Parker) – 8:26
- "Memories of You" (Eubie Blake, Andy Razaf) – 2:22
- "Misty" (Johnny Burke, Erroll Garner) – 2:45
- "I Can't Get Started" (Vernon Duke, Ira Gershwin) – 2:26
- "Wee Dot" (J.J. Johnson, Leo Parker) – 9:49
- "Moonglow" (Eddie DeLange, Will Hudson, Irving Mills) – 3:29
- "Sweet Georgia Brown" (Ben Bernie, Kenneth Casey, Maceo Pinkard) – 4:28
- "C Jam Blues" (Barney Bigard, Duke Ellington) – 6:12
- "Woman, You Must Be Crazy" (T-Bone Walker) – 9:08
- "Stormy Monday" (Walker) – 6:40
Disc Two
- "Swamp Goo" (Ellington) – 4:54
- "Girdle Hurdle" (Ellington) – 2:51
- "The Shepherd" (Ellington) – 6:33
- "Rue Bleue" (Ellington) – 2:44
- "Salome" (Raymond Fol) – 3:34
- "A Chromatic Love Affair" (Ellington) – 3:58
- "Mount Harissa" (Ellington, Billy Strayhorn) – 6:39
- "Blood Count" (Strayhorn) – 3:50
- "Rockin' in Rhythm" (Harry Carney, Ellington, Mills) – 3:40
- "Very Tenor" (Ellington) – 7:51
- "Onions (Wild Onions)" (Ellington) – 2:55
- "Take the "A" Train" (Strayhorn) – 5:29
Disc Three
- "Satin Doll" (Ellington, Johnny Mercer, Strayhorn) – 5:25
- "Tootie for Cootie" (Ellington, Jimmy Hamilton) – 6:45
- "Up Jump" (Ellington) – 3:38
- "Prelude to a Kiss" (Ellington, Mack Gordon, Mills) – 4:39
- "Mood Indigo"/"I Got It Bad (and That Ain't Good)" (Bigard, Ellington, Mills)/(Ellington, Paul Francis Webster) – 6:08
- "Things Ain't What They Used to Be" (Mercer Ellington, Ted Persons) – 4:31
- "Don't Be That Way" (Benny Goodman, Mitchell Parish, Edgar Sampson) – 4:09
- "You've Changed" (Bill Carey, Carl T. Fischer) – 4:12
- "Let's Do It (Let's Fall in Love)" (Cole Porter) – 4:38
- "On the Sunny Side of the Street" (Dorothy Fields, Jimmy McHugh) – 2:14
- "It's Only a Paper Moon" (Harold Arlen, Yip Harburg, Billy Rose) – 2:31
- "Day Dream" (Ellington, John La Touche, Strayhorn) – 4:49
- "If I Could Be with You (One Hour Tonight)" (Henry Creamer, James P. Johnson) – 3:18
- "Between the Devil and the Deep Blue Sea" (Harold Arlen, Ted Koehler) – 3:50
- "Cotton Tail" (Ellington) – 5:29
Disc One
- Tracks 1-3: The Oscar Peterson trio
- Tracks 4-8: Jam session with Sam Jones, Benny Carter, Bobby Durham, Zoot Sims and Paul Gonsalves
- Tracks 9-10: Coleman Hawkins with the Oscar Peterson trio & Paul Gonsalves
- Track 11: Jam session with Oscar Peterson, Sam Jones, Louis Hayes, Coleman Hawkins, Johnny Hodges and Benny Carter
- Tracks 12-13: T-Bone Walker with Oscar Peterson, Clark Terry, Sam Jones, Bobby Durham, Coleman Hawkins, Johnny Hodges and Benny Carter
Disc Two
- Tracks 1-11: Duke Ellington and his orchestra
- Track 12: Oscar Peterson with Duke Ellington and his orchestra
Disc Three
- Tracks 1-6: Duke Ellington and his orchestra
- Tracks 7-10: Ella Fitzgerald with the Duke Ellington orchestra
- Tracks 11-14: Ella Fitzgerald with the Jimmy Jones trio
- Track 15: Ella Fitzgerald with the Jimmy Jones trio and Duke Ellington orchestra
Personnel
- Ella Fitzgerald – vocals
- T–Bone Walker – vocals, guitar
- Clark Terry – trumpet
- Benny Carter – alto saxophone
- Coleman Hawkins – tenor saxophone
- Zoot Sims – tenor saxophone
- Bobby Durham – drums
- Louis Hayes – drums
Oscar Peterson trio
- Oscar Peterson – piano
- Sam Jones – double bass
- Bobby Durham – drums
Jimmy Jones trio
- Jimmy Jones – piano
- Bob Cranshaw – double bass
- Sam Woodyard – drums
Duke Ellington Orchestra
- Duke Ellington – piano
- Cat Anderson – trumpet
- Mercer Ellington – trumpet
- Herbie Jones – trumpet
- Cootie Williams – trumpet
- Buster Cooper – trombone
- Lawrence Brown – trombone
- Chuck Connors – bass trombone
- Jimmy Hamilton – saxophone
- Johnny Hodges – alto saxophone
- Russell Procope – alto saxophone
- Paul Gonsalves – tenor saxophone
- Harry Carney – baritone saxophone
- John Lamb – double bass
- Rufus "Speedy" Jones – drums
References
- ^ a b c "AllMusic review". AllMusic. All Media Guide. Retrieved 2012-03-12.
- ^ Gary Giddins (18 May 2000). Visions of jazz: the first century. Oxford University Press. pp. 325–. ISBN 978-0-19-513241-0. Retrieved 13 March 2012.
- v
- t
- e
unless stated otherwise.
as leader
or co-leader
- Body and Soul (1939–56)/The Hawk in Hi Fi (1956)
- Disorder at the Border (1952)
- The Hawk Talks (1952–53)
- The Hawk Returns (released 1954)
- Timeless Jazz (1954)
- Accent on Tenor Sax (1955)
- The Hawk in Paris (1956)
- The Gilded Hawk (1956–57)
- Coleman Hawkins Encounters Ben Webster (1957)
- The Coleman Hawkins, Roy Eldridge, Pete Brown, Jo Jones All Stars at Newport (1957)
- The Genius of Coleman Hawkins (1957)
- The Hawk Flies High (1957)
- Bean Bags (and Milt Jackson, 1958)
- Coleman Hawkins and Confrères (1958)
- Soul (1958)
- The High and Mighty Hawk (1958)
- The Saxophone Section (1958)
- Coleman Hawkins with the Red Garland Trio (1959)
- Hawk Eyes (1959)
- Coleman Hawkins All Stars (with Vic Dickenson and Joe Thomas, 1959)
- Very Saxy (and Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis, Buddy Tate, Arnett Cobb, 1959)
- At Ease with Coleman Hawkins (1960)
- Coleman Hawkins and His Orchestra (1960)
- Night Hawk (and Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis, 1960)
- The Hawk Swings (1960)
- Jazz Reunion (and Pee Wee Russell, 1961)
- The Hawk Relaxes (1961)
- Back in Bean's Bag (and Clark Terry, 1962)
- Bluesy Burrell (with Kenny Burrell, 1962)
- Coleman Hawkins Plays Make Someone Happy from Do Re Mi (1962)
- Desafinado (1962)
- Duke Ellington Meets Coleman Hawkins (1962)
- Good Old Broadway (1962)
- Hawkins! Alive! At the Village Gate (1962)
- Hawkins! Eldridge! Hodges! Alive! At the Village Gate! (1962)
- The Jazz Version of No Strings (1962)
- Today and Now (1962)
- Sonny Meets Hawk! (and Sonny Rollins, 1963)
- Wrapped Tight (1965)
- The Greatest Jazz Concert in the World (multiple leaders, 1967)
- Further Definitions (Benny Carter, 1951)
- All the Cats Join In (Buck Clayton, 1953–56)
- Jumpin' at the Woodside (Buck Clayton, 1954–55)
- The Complete RCA Victor Recordings (Dizzy Gillespie, 1939)
- Blues Groove (Tiny Grimes, 1958)
- At Newport '63 (Lambert, Hendricks & Bavan, 1963)
- Straight Ahead (Abbey Lincoln, 1961)
- 2-3-4 (Shelly Manne, 1962)
- Monk's Music (Thelonious Monk, 1957)
- Thelonious Monk with John Coltrane (also Hawkins, 1957)
- We Insist! (Max Roach, 1960)
- Ben Webster and Associates (1959)
- Live at the Five Spot (Randy Weston, 1959)
- At Newport '63 (Joe Williams, 1963)