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Duke Ellington with Count Basie's Orchestra, First Time: The Count Meets the Duke CD cover artwork

Duke Ellington with Count Basie's Orchestra, First Time: The Count Meets the Duke

Audio CD

Disk ID: 248139

Disk length: 1h 10m 18s (14 Tracks)

Original Release Date: 1961

Label: Unknown

View all albums by Duke Ellington with Count Basie's Orchestra...

Tracks & Durations

1. Battle royal 5:37
2. To you 3:57
3. Take the a train 3:49
4. Corner pocket [aka until I met you] 4:57
5. Wild man 5:47
6. Segue in c 8:24
7. B D B 4:46
8. Jumpin at the woodside 3:15
9. One more once 3:28
10. Take the a train [the count departs] 5:52
11. B D B [alternate take] 4:32
12. Blues in boss' flat [blues in frankie's flat] 3:16
13. Wild man [aka wild man moore, alternate take] 5:58
14. Battle royal [ rehearsal & alternate takes] 6:31

Note: The information about this album is acquired from the publicly available resources and we are not responsible for their accuracy.

Review

The two greatest big bands in jazz history side by side on your headphones: What can be more glorious? If, as Billy Strayhorn said, Duke Ellington's band was his instrument, then this 1961 session finds Ellington and Count Basie "trading fours," as it were. The composer credits and solo space are divided democratically, to say the least--four songs from Duke's camp, four from Basie's. The sparring between soloists of both bands is a pure delight, especially the gentle conversations between the two leaders-pianists, who finish each other's thoughts as if all four hands were attached to one unified torso. Highlights include two engaging new Duke compositions--the blistering opener "Battle Royal" and the impulsive "Wild Man"--and the closing Basie chestnut "Jumpin' at the Woodside," on which the lead tenors Frank Foster and Paul Gonsalves engage in ferocious dueling. Amazingly, there is no toe-stepping amid the rousing interplay. --Marc GreilsamerTake the Kansas City-style streamlined swing of Count Basie's band and put it together with the omni-American "total jazz" of the Duke Ellington Orchestra and you've got one memorable session. Recorded in 1961 and reissued with unreleased, rehearsal, and alternate takes, the date has a friendly after-hours feel, with the Ellington crew in the right channel and the Basie band in the left. They both deliver the type of no-nonsense straight-ahead jazz that characterized the best of the big-band sound: Ellington's brisk 4/4 opener "Battle Royal" features some stratospheric blowing by tenor saxophonist Frank Wess and trumpeter Cat Anderson along with a volcanic drum "conversation" between Sam Woodyard and Sonny Payne. The sound of the locomotive drives the midtempo "Corner Pocket," the Basie-associated standard by guitarist Freddie Green, steered by saxophonist Paul Gonsalves's robust tenor sax. "Segue in C" showcases Ellington and Basie's Fats Waller-Willie "the Lion" Smith stride-piano roots, with the former's dark chord clusters and the latter's feathery in-the-pocket phrasing. The ballad "To You" is marked by cascading horn harmonies laced with Ellington trombonist Quentin "Butter" Jackson's pleading muted solo. The Basie-Ellington hits "Jumpin' at the Woodside" and "Take the 'A' Train"--with composer Billy Strayhorn tickling the ivories in place of Basie--bring out the best in Basie, Foster, Gonsalves, and trumpeter Ray Nance, and they trade fours and cap this amazing encounter. --Eugene Holley Jr.

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