| DUKE
ELLINGTON (ARTIST BIOGRAPHY)
Duke Ellington (Edward Kennedy Ellington, Washington,
D.C., 29 April, 1899 - New York City, 24 May, 1974), was an American
jazz composer, pianist, and bandleader.
Through the ranks of Duke Ellington’s Orchestra passed some of the
biggest names in jazz, including Johnny Hodges, Cootie Williams,
Bubber Miley, Joe “Tricky Sam” Nanton, Barney Bigard, Ben Webster,
Harry Carney, Sonny Greer, Otto Hardwick, Clark Terry, Jimmy Blanton,
Ray Nance, Paul Gonsalves, and Wellman Braud. Many musicians stayed
with him for decades. And while all of them were remarkable in their
own right, and they all would have probably made it into the annals
of jazz history no matter who they played for, it was Ellington’s
genius as a composer, pianist, bandleader, celebrity personality,
and, most importantly, arranger, that made them the most incredible
orchestral unit in the history of jazz. His ability to write and
arrange for personalities, rather than instruments, made every solo
and every section of every arrangement breathe with character. A
giant on the 20th century American cultural scene, Duke Ellington
was widely regarded as a legend during his own lifetime.
Early life
Edward Kennedy Ellington was born on April 29, 1899 to James Edward
Ellington and Daisy Kennedy Ellington. They lived with his maternal
grandparents at 2129 Ward Place, NW in Washington, D.C. James Edward
Ellington was born in Lincolnton, North Carolina on April 15, 1879
and moved to Washington, D.C. in 1886 with his parents.[4] Daisy
Kennedy, was born in Washington, D.C. on January 4, 1879, and was
the daughter of a former American slave. J.E. made blueprints for
the United States Navy. He also worked as a butler for Dr. Middleton
F. Cuthbert, a prominent white physician, and occasionally worked as
a White House caterer. Daisy and J.E. were both piano players—she
playing parlor songs and he operatic airs.
At the age of seven, Ellington began taking piano lessons from Mrs.
Marietta Clinkscales. Daisy surrounded her son with dignified women
who reinforced his manners and taught him to live elegantly. From
his father, he absorbed self-confidence. Ellington’s childhood
friends noticed that “his casual, offhand manner, his easy grace,
and his dapper dress gave him the bearing of a young nobleman”, and
began calling him Duke. Ellington credited his “chum” Edgar McEntree,
“a sharp dresser himself,” with the nickname. “I think he felt that
in order for me to be eligible for his constant companionship, I
should have a title. So he called me Duke.”[9]
Though Ellington took piano lessons, he was more concerned with
baseball. “President Roosevelt (Teddy) would come by on his horse
sometimes, and stop and watch us play,” he recalled. Ellington went
to Armstrong Technical High School in Washington, D.C. He got his
first job selling peanuts at Washington Senators’ baseball games
where he conquered his stage fright.
In the summer of 1914, while working as a soda jerk at the Poodle
Dog Café, he wrote his first composition, “Soda Fountain Rag” (also
known as the “Poodle Dog Rag”). Ellington created “Soda Fountain
Rag” by ear, because he had not yet learned to read and write music.
“I would play the ‘Soda Fountain Rag’ as a one-step, two-step, waltz,
tango, and fox trot,” Ellington has recalled. “Listeners never knew
it was the same piece. I was established as having my own
repertoire.” In his autobiography, Music is my Mistress, (1973)
Ellington comments he missed more lessons than he attended, feeling
at the time that playing the piano was not his talent. Over time,
this would change. Ellington started sneaking into Frank Holiday’s
Poolroom at age fourteen. Hearing the poolroom pianists play ignited
Ellington’s love for the instrument and he began to take his piano
studies seriously.
Ellington began listening to, watching, and imitating ragtime
pianists, not only in Washington, D.C., but also in Philadelphia and
Atlantic City, where he vacationed with his mother during the summer
months.[citation needed] Dunbar High School music teacher Henry Lee
Grant gave him private lessons in harmony. With the additional
guidance of Washington pianist and band leader Oliver “Doc” Perry,
Ellington learned to read sheet music, project a professional style,
and improve his technique. Ellington was also inspired by his first
encounters with James P. Johnson and Luckey Roberts, early jazz
piano giants. Later in New York he took advice from Will Marion
Cook, Fats Waller, and Sidney Bechet. Ellington started to play gigs
in cafés and clubs in and around Washington, D.C. and began to
realize his love for music. His attachment grew to be so strong that
he turned down an art scholarship to the Pratt Institute in Brooklyn
in 1916. He dropped out of Armstrong Manual Training School, where
he was studying commercial art, just three months shy of graduation.
From 1917 through 1919, Ellington launched his musical career,
painting commercial signs by day and playing piano by night. Duke’s
entrepreneurial side came out when if a customer would ask him to
make a sign for a dance or party, he would ask them if they had
musical entertainment, if not Ellington would ask if he could play
for them. He also had a messenger job with the U.S. Navy and State
Departments. Ellington moved out of his parents’ home and into one
which he bought for himself as he became a successful ragtime, jazz,
and society pianist. At first, he played in other ensembles, and in
late 1917 formed his first group, “The Duke’s Serenaders” (“Colored
Syncopators”, his telephone directory advertising proclaimed)[citation
needed]. He was not only a member, but also the booking agent. His
first play date was at the True Reformer’s Hall where he took home
75 cents.
Ellington played throughout the Washington, D.C. area and into
Virginia for private society balls and embassy parties. The band
included Otto Hardwick, who switched from bass to saxophone; Arthur
Whetsol on trumpet; Elmer Snowden on banjo; and Sonny Greer on
drums. The band thrived, performing for both African-American and
white audiences, a rarity during the racially divided times.[citation
needed]
Marriage and family
With his career taking off, Ellington felt secure enough to marry
his high school sweetheart, Edna Thompson, on July 2, 1918 when he
was 19. Shortly after their marriage, on March 11, 1919 Edna gave
birth to their only son, Mercer Kennedy Ellington, who went on to
play trumpet, lead his own band and work as the road manager of his
father’s band, eventually taking it over after Duke’s death. He was
an important archivist of his father’s musical life. Ellington’s
sister, Ruth, later ran Tempo Music, Ellington’s music publishing
company.
Ellington’s granddaughter Mercedes is a dancer who has performed in
network television productions. Grandson Paul Ellington is a pianist
and composer who now leads the Duke Ellington Orchestra.
Early career
Left: Duke Ellington circa 1950When his drummer Sonny Greer was
invited to join the Wilber Sweatman Orchestra in New York City,
Ellington made the fateful decision to leave behind his successful
career in Washington, D.C. and aspire to the challenge of Harlem.
The ‘Harlem Renaissance’ was in progress. New dance crazes, like the
Charleston, were bred there as well as African-American musical
theater, including Eubie Blake’s Shuffle Along. After the young
musicians left the Sweatman Orchestra to strike out on their own,
they found an emerging jazz scene that was highly competitive and
hard to crack. They hustled pool by day and played whatever gig they
could find. The young band met Willie “The Lion” Smith who showed
them the scene and even gave them spare cash. They played at
rent-house parties to get by. After a few months, the young
musicians returned to Washington, D.C. feeling discouraged.
But in June 1923, a gig in Atlantic City, New Jersey led to a play
date at the prestigious Exclusive Club in Harlem, followed in
September 1923 by a move to the Hollywood Club, 49th and Broadway,
and a four-year engagement which gave Ellington a solid artistic
base. The group was called Elmer Snowden and his Black Sox Orchestra
and had seven members, including James “Bubber” Miley, a trumpeter
whose growling style changed the “sweet” dance band sound of the
group to one that was edgier and hotter. They renamed themselves
“The Washingtonians”. When Snowden left the group in early 1924,
Ellington took over as bandleader. After a fire, the club was
re-opened as the Club Kentucky (often referred to as the “Kentucky
Club”), an engagement which set the stage for the biggest
opportunities in Ellington’s life.
Ellington made eight records in 1924, receiving composing credit on
three including Choo Choo.[12] In 1925, Ellington contributed four
songs to Chocolate Kiddies, an all-African-American revue which
introduced European audiences to African-American styles and
performers. “Duke Ellington and his Kentucky Club Orchestra” grew to
a ten-piece organization, developing their distinct sound,
displaying the non-traditional expression of Ellington’s
arrangements, the street rhythms of Harlem, and the exotic-sounding
trombone growls and wah-wahs, high-squealing trumpets, and sultry
saxophone blues licks of the band members. For a short time, the
great soprano saxophonist Sidney Bechet played with the group,
imparting his propulsive swing and superior musicianship on the
young band members. This helped attract the attention of some of the
biggest names of jazz, including Paul Whiteman.
In 1927, King Oliver turned down a regular booking for his group as
the house band at Harlem’s Cotton Club; the offer passed to
Ellington. With a weekly radio broadcast and famous clientèle
nightly pouring in to see them, Ellington and his band thrived in
the period from 1932 to 1942, a “golden age” for the poor boys from
Washington D.C.
Trumpeter Bubber Miley was a member of the orchestra for only a
short period but had a major influence on Ellington’s sound.[citation
needed] An early experimenter in jazz trumpet growling, Miley is
credited with morphing the band’s style from rigid dance
instrumentation to a growling ‘jungle’ style. He also composed most
of “Black and Tan Fantasy” and “Creole Love Call”. An alcoholic,
Miley had to leave the band before they gained wider fame. He died
in 1932 at the age of twenty-nine. He was an important influence on
Cootie Williams, who replaced him.
In 1927 Ellington made a career-advancing agreement with
agent-publisher Irving Mills giving Mills a 45% interest in
Ellington’s future. The brash, shrewd Mills had an eye for new
talent and early on published compositions by Hoagy Carmichael,
Dorothy Fields, and Harold Arlen. During the 1930s, Ellington’s
popularity continued to increase, largely as a result of the
promotional skills of Mills, who got more than his fair share of
co-composer credits. Mills arranged recording sessions on the
Brunswick, Victor, and Columbia labels which gave Ellington popular
recognition. Mills took the management burden off of Ellington’s
shoulders, allowing him to focus on his band’s sound and his
compositions.[citation needed] Ellington ended his association with
Mills in 1937, although he continued to record under Mills’ banner
through 1940.
At the Cotton Club, Ellington’s group performed all the music for
the revues, which mixed comedy, dance numbers, vaudeville, burlesque,
hot music, and illegal alcohol. The musical numbers were composed by
Jimmy McHugh and the lyrics by Dorothy Fields (later Harold Arlen
and Ted Koehler), with some Ellington originals mixed in. Weekly
radio broadcasts from the club gave Ellington national exposure. In
1929, Ellington appeared in his first movie, a nineteen-minute
all-African-American RKO short, Black and Tan, in which he played
the hero “Duke”. In the same year, The Cotton Club Orchestra
appeared on stage for several months in Florenz Ziegfeld’s Show Girl,
along with vaudeville stars Jimmy Durante, Eddie Foy, Jr., Al Jolson,
Ruby Keeler, and with music and lyrics by George Gershwin and Gus
Kahn. That feverish period also included numerous recordings, under
the pseudonyms “Whoopee Makers”, “The Jungle Band”, “Harlem
Footwarmers”, and the “Ten Black Berries”. In 1930, Ellington and
his Orchestra connected with a whole different audience in a concert
with Maurice Chevalier and they also performed at the Roseland
Ballroom, “America’s foremost ballroom”. Noted composer Percy
Grainger was also an early admirer and supporter.
In 1929, when Ellington conducted the orchestra for Show Girl, he
met Will Vodery, Ziegfeld’s musical supervisor. In his 1946
biography, Duke Ellington, Barry Ulanov wrote: “From Vodery, as he (Ellington)
says himself, he drew his chromatic convictions, his uses of the
tones ordinarily extraneous to the diatonic scale, with the
consequent alteration of the harmonic character of his music, its
broadening, The deepening of his resources. It has become customary
to ascribe the classical influences upon Duke - Delius and Debussy
and Ravel - to direct contact with their music. Actually his serious
appreciation of those and other modern composers, came after his
meeting with Vodery.” Ulanov, Barry. Duke Ellington, Creative Age
Press, 1946.
As the Depression deepened, the recording industry took a dive,
dropping over 90% by 1933. Ellington and his orchestra survived the
hard times by taking to the road in a series of tours. Radio
exposure also helped maintain his popularity. Ivie Anderson was
hired as their vocalist (Sonny Greer had been providing occasional
vocals). Normally, Ellington led the orchestra by conducting from
the keyboard using piano cues and visual gestures; very rarely did
he conduct using a baton. As a bandleader, Ellington was not a
strict disciplinarian but he maintained control of his orchestra for
decades to come with a crafty combination of charm, humor, flattery,
and astute psychology. A complex, private person, he revealed his
feelings to only his closest intimates and effectively used his
public persona to deflect attention away from himself.
While their United States audience remained mainly African-American
in this period, the Cotton Club had a near exclusive white clientèle
and the band had a huge following overseas, demonstrated both in a
trip to England in 1933 and a 1934 visit to the European mainland.
The English visit saw Ellington win praise from members of the
“serious” music community, including composer Constant Lambert,
which gave a boost to his aspirations to compose longer “serious”
pieces. And for agent Mills, it was a publicity triumph, as
Ellington was now “internationally famous”. On their tour through
the segregated South in 1934, they avoided some of the traveling
difficulties of African-American musicians by touring in private
railcars, which provided easy accommodations, dining, and storage
for equipment, while avoiding the indignities of segregated
facilities.
The death of Ellington’s mother in 1935 led to a temporary slump in
his career. Competition was also intensifying[citation needed], as
African-American and white “Swing Bands” began to rocket to popular
attention, including those of Benny Goodman, Tommy Dorsey, Jimmy
Dorsey, Jimmie Lunceford, Benny Carter, Earl Hines, Chick Webb, and
Count Basie. Swing dancing became a youth phenomenon, particularly
with white college audiences, and “danceability” drove record sales
and bookings. Jukeboxes proliferated nationwide spreading the gospel
of “swing”. Ellington band could certainly “swing” with the best of
them, but Ellington’s strength was mood and nuance, and richness of
composition, hence his statement “jazz is music; swing is business”.
The challenge for Ellington at that time was to create a workable
balance between his ceaseless artistic exploration and the popular
requirements of that era.[citation needed] Ellington countered with
two innovations. He made recordings for smaller groups (sextets,
octets, and nonets) drawn from his then 15-man orchestra and he
composed pieces that were concerto-like and focused on a specific
instrumentalist, as with Jeep’s Blues for Johnny Hodges and Yearning
for Love with Lawrence Brown.
In 1937, Ellington returned to the Cotton Club which had relocated
to the mid-town theater district. In the summer of that year, his
father died, and due to many expenses Ellington’s financial
condition was tight. Things improved in 1938 and he met and moved in
with Cotton Club employee Beatrice “Evie” Ellis. After splitting
with agent Irving Mills, he signed on with William Morris. The 1930s
ended with a very successful European tour just as World War II
loomed.
Ellington delivered some huge hits during the 1930s, which greatly
helped to build his overall reputation “Mood Indigo” in 1930, “It
Don’t Mean a Thing (If It Ain’t Got That Swing)” in 1932,
“Sophisticated Lady” in 1933, “In a Sentimental Mood” in 1935,
“Caravan” in 1937, “I Let A Song Go Out Of My Heart” in 1938.
Following shortly were “Do Nothing Till You Hear from Me” in 1940
and “Take the “A” Train” (written by Billy Strayhorn) in 1941.
The most important event of Ellington’s “golden age” was the arrival
of Billy Strayhorn.[citation needed] Hired as a lyricist, Strayhorn
, nicknamed “Swee’ Pea” for his mild manner, eventually became a
vital member of the Ellington Organization and as Ellington
described him, “my right arm, my left arm, all the eyes in the back
of my head, my brain waves in his head, and his in mine”.[16]
Strayhorn, with his Classical music training, applied that knowledge
to arrange and polish future Ellington works. Ellington came to rely
on Strayhorn’s harmonic judgment, discipline, and taste.
Duke in the 1940s
The band reached a creative peak in the early 1940s[citation needed],
when Ellington wrote for an orchestra of distinctive voices and
displayed tremendous creativity. In November 1943 Ellington debuted
Black, Brown and Beige in Carnegie Hall which told the struggle of
African-Americans, and began a series of concerts ideally suited to
displaying Ellington’s longer works. While some jazz musicians had
played at Carnegie Hall before, few had performed anything as
elaborate as Ellington’s work. Some of the musicians created a
sensation in their own right. The short-lived Jimmy Blanton
transformed the use of double bass in jazz, allowing it to function
as a solo rather than a rhythm instrument alone. Ben Webster too,
the Orchestra’s first regular tenor saxophonist, started a rivalry
with Johnny Hodges as the Orchestra’s foremost voice in the sax
section. Ray Nance joined, replacing Cootie Williams who had “defected”,
contemporary wags claimed, to Benny Goodman. Nance, however, added
violin to the instrumental colors Ellington had at his disposal. A
privately made recording of Nance’s first concert date, at Fargo,
North Dakota, in November 1940, is probably the most effective
display of the band at the peak of its powers during this period.
This recording is one of the first of innumerable live performances
which survive, made by enthusiasts or broadcasters, significantly
expanding the Ducal discography as a result.
Three-minute masterpieces flowed from the minds of Ellington, Billy
Strayhorn (from 1939), Ellington’s son Mercer Ellington, and members
of the Orchestra. “Cotton Tail”, “Mainstem”, “Harlem Airshaft”,
“Streets of New York” and dozens of others date from this period.
Ellington’s long-term aim became to extend the jazz form from the
three-minute limit of the 78 rpm record side, of which he was an
acknowledged master.[citation needed] He had composed and recorded
Creole Rhapsody as early as 1931, and his tribute to his mother,
“Reminiscing in Tempo,” had filled four 10” record sides in 1935;
however, it was not until the 1940s that this became a regular
feature of Ellington’s work. In this, he was helped by Strayhorn,
who had enjoyed a more thorough training in the forms associated
with classical music than Ellington. The first of these, “Black,
Brown, and Beige” (1943), was dedicated to telling the story of
African-Americans, the place of slavery, and the church in their
history. Unfortunately, starting a regular pattern, Ellington’s
longer works were generally not well-received; Jump for Joy, an
earlier musical, closed after only six performances in 1941.
The first recording ban of 1942-3 had a serious effect on all the
big bands because of the resulting increase in royalty payments to
musicians. The financial viability of Ellington’s Orchestra came
under threat, though Ellington’s income as a songwriter ultimately
subsidized it. Ellington always spent lavishly and although he drew
a respectable income from the Orchestra’s operations, the band’s
income often just covered expenses.
Meanwhile, the development of modern jazz, or bebop, the music
industry’s shift to solo vocalists such as the young Frank Sinatra
as the Big Band age died out, and the diminishing popularity of
ballroom and nightclub entertainment in the early television era all
undermined Ellington’s popularity and status as a trendsetter.[citation
needed] Bebop rebelled against commercial jazz, dance jazz, and
strict forms to become the music of jazz aficionados. Furthermore,
by 1950 the emerging African-American popular music style known as
Rhythm and Blues drew away the young African-American audience and
soon Rock & Roll followed. In the face of these major social shifts,
Ellington continued on his own course, but major defections soon
affected his Orchestra and he started to retire earlier works
composed for now departed members. For a time though Ellington
continued to turn out major works, such as the Kay Davis vocal
feature Transblucency and major extended compositions such as Harlem
(1950), whose score he presented to music-loving President Harry
Truman.
In 1951, Ellington suffered a major loss of personnel, with Sonny
Greer, Lawrence Brown, and most significantly, Johnny Hodges leaving
to pursue other ventures. Lacking overseas opportunities and motion
picture appearances, Ellington Orchestra survived on “one-nighters”
and whatever else came their way. Even though he made many
television appearances, Ellington’s hope that television would
provide a significant new venue for his type of jazz did not pan
out. The introduction of the 33 1/3 rpm LP record and hi-fi
phonograph did give new life to older compositions. However by 1955,
after ten years of recording for Capitol, Ellington no longer had a
regular recording affiliation.
Ellington’s appearance at the Newport Jazz Festival on July 7, 1956
returned him to wider prominence and exposed him to new audiences.
The feature “Diminuendo and Crescendo in Blue”, with saxophonist
Paul Gonsalves’s six-minute saxophone solo, had been in the band’s
book since 1937, but on this occasion it nearly created a riot. The
revived attention should not have surprised anyone — Hodges had
returned to the fold the previous year, and Ellington’s
collaboration with Strayhorn had been renewed around the same time,
under terms amenable to the younger man. Such Sweet Thunder (1957),
based on Shakespeare’s plays and characters, and The Queen’s Suite
the following year (dedicated to Queen Elizabeth II), were products
of the renewed impetus which the Newport appearance had helped to
create.
A new record contract with Columbia produced Ellington’s
best-selling LP Ellington at Newport and yielded six years of
recording stability under producer Irving Townsend, who coaxed both
commercial and artistic productions from Ellington.[citation needed]
In 1957, CBS (Columbia’s parent corporation) aired a live television
production of A Drum Is a Woman, an allegorical suite which received
mixed reviews. Other festivals at Monterey and elsewhere provided
new venues for live exposure, and a European tour in 1958 was wildly
received. After a 25-year gap, Ellington and Strayhorn again wrote
film scores, this time for Anatomy of a Murder and Paris Blues.
Despite some personnel turnover, in 1960 Ellington still possessed a
seasoned corps with Carney, Hodges, Williams, Brown, Nance,
Hamilton, Procope, Anderson, and Gonsalves. Ellington and Strayhorn,
always looking for new musical territory, produced adaptations of
John Steinbeck’s novel Sweet Thursday, Tchaikovsky’s Nutcracker
Suite and Edvard Grieg’s Peer Gynt. The late 1950s also saw Ella
Fitzgerald record her Duke Ellington Songbook with Ellington and his
orchestra—a recognition that Ellington’s songs had now become part
of the cultural canon known as the “Great American Songbook”.
Detroit Free Press music critic Mark Stryker concludes that the work
of Billy Strayhorn and Ellington in Anatomy of a Murder is
“indispensible, [although] . . . too sketchy to rank in the top
echelon among Ellington-Strayhorn masterpiece suites like Such Sweet
Thunder and The Far East Suite, but its most inspired moments are
their equal.” Film historians have recognized the soundtrack “as a
landmark — the first significant Hollywood film music by African
Americans comprising non-diegetic music, that is, music whose source
is not visible or implied by action in the film, like an on-screen
band.” The score avoided the cultural stereotypes which previously
characterized jazz scores and rejected a strict adherence to visuals
in ways that presaged the New Wave cinema of the ’60s.”
In the early 1960s, Ellington was between recording contracts, which
allowed him to record with a variety of artists mostly not
previously associated with him. The Ellington and Count Basie
orchestras recorded together and he made a record with Coleman
Hawkins, plus some work for Frank Sinatra’s new Reprise label. In
1962, he participated in a session which produced the “Money Jungle”
(United Artists) album with Charles Mingus and Max Roach, and also
recorded with John Coltrane for Impulse. Musicians who had
previously worked with Ellington returned to the Orchestra as
members: Lawrence Brown in 1960 and Cootie Williams two years later.
Ellington was by now performing all over the world, a significant
portion of each year was now spent making overseas tours, and he
formed notable new working relationships, among which included the
Swedish vocalist Alice Babs, and South African musicians Dollar
Brand and Sathima Bea Benjamin (A Morning in Paris, 1963/2007). His
earlier hits were now established standards, earning Ellington
impressive royalties.
Ellington receiving the Presidential Medal of Freedom from President
Nixon, 1969.Ellington was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize in 1965,
but was turned down. His reaction at 67 years old: “Fate is being
kind to me. Fate doesn’t want me to be famous too young.” He
performed the first of his Sacred Concerts, an attempt at fusing
Christian liturgy with jazz, in September of the same year, and even
though it received mixed reviews, Ellington was enormously proud of
the composition and performed it dozens of times. This concert was
followed by two others of the same type in 1968 and 1973, called the
Second and Third Sacred Concerts, respectively. This caused enormous
controversy in what was already a tumultuous time in the United
States. Many saw the Sacred Music suites as an attempt to reinforce
commercial support for organized religion, though Ellington simply
said it was, “the most important thing I’ve done.” The piano upon
which the Sacred Concerts were composed is part of the collection of
the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History. Like Haydn
and Mozart, Ellington conducted his orchestra from the piano - he
always played the keyboard parts when the Sacred Concerts were
performed.
Ellington continued to make vital and innovative recordings,
including The Far East Suite (1966), “The New Orleans Suite” (1970),
and “The Afro-Eurasian Eclipse” (1971), much of it inspired by his
world tours. It was during this time that Ellington recorded his
only album with Frank Sinatra, entitled Francis A. & Edward
K…
Ellington was awarded the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award in 1966.
He was later awarded several other prizes, the Presidential Medal of
Freedom in 1969, and the Legion of Honor by France in 1973, the
highest civilian honors in each country.[1] He died of lung cancer
and pneumonia on May 24, 1974, a month after his 75th birthday, and
was interred in the Woodlawn Cemetery, The Bronx, New York City.[23]
At his funeral attended by over 12,000 people at the Cathedral of
St. John the Divine, Ella Fitzgerald summed up the occasion, “It’s a
very sad day. A genius has passed.”[24] Mercer Ellington picked up
the reins of the orchestra immediately after Duke’s death.
Work in films and the theater
Ellington’s film work began in 1929 with the short film Black and
Tan Fantasy. His Symphony In Black, which introduced Billie Holiday,
was performed on film in 1935, winning an Academy Award as the best
musical short subject. He also appeared in the 1930 Amos ‘n’ Andy
film Check and Double Check. He and his Orchestra continued to
appear in films throughout the 1930s and 1940s, both in short films
and in features such as Murder at the Vanities, and Belle Of The
Nineties, (1934), and Cabin In The Sky (1943). In the late 1950s,
his work in films took the shape of scoring for soundtracks, notably
Anatomy of a Murder (1959), with James Stewart, in which he appeared
fronting a roadhouse combo, and Paris Blues, (1961), which featured
Paul Newman and Sidney Poitier as jazz musicians.
He wrote an original score for Shakespeare’s Timon of Athens that
was first used in the Stratford Festival production that opened July
29, 1963 for director Michael Langham, who has used it for several
subsequent productions, most recently in an adaptation by Stanley
Silverman that expands on the score with some of Ellington’s
best-known works.
Ellington composed the score for the musical “Jump For Joy,” which
was performed in Los Angeles in 1941. Ellington’s sole book musical,
Beggar’s Holiday, was staged on Broadway in 1946. Sophisticated
Ladies, an award-winning 1981 musical revue, incorporated many of
the tunes he made famous.
Numerous memorials have been dedicated to Duke Ellington, in cities
from New York and Washington, DC to Los Angeles.
In Ellington’s birthplace of Washington, D.C., there is a school
dedicated to his honor and memory as well as one of the bridges over
Rock Creek Park. The Duke Ellington School of the Arts educates
talented students, who are considering careers in the arts, by
providing intensive arts instruction and strong academic programs
that prepare students for post-secondary education and professional
careers. The Calvert Street Bridge was renamed the Duke Ellington
Bridge; built in 1935, it connects Woodley Park to Adams Morgan.
On February 24, 2009, the United States Mint launched a new coin
featuring Duke Ellington, making him the first African-American to
appear by himself on a circulating U.S. coin. Ellington appears on
the reverse (“tails”) side of the District of Columbia quarter. The
coin is part of the U.S. Mint’s 50 State Quarters Program and
celebrates Ellington’s birthplace in the District of Columbia.
Ellington is depicted on the quarter seated at a piano, sheet music
in hand, along with the inscription “Justice for All.”
Ellington lived for years in a townhouse on the corner of
Manhattan’s Riverside Drive and West 106th Street. After his death,
West 106th Street was officially renamed Duke Ellington Boulevard. A
large memorial to Ellington, created by sculptor Robert Graham, was
dedicated in 1997 in New York’s Central Park, near Fifth Avenue and
110th Street, an intersection named Duke Ellington Circle.
Although he made two more stage appearances before his death,
Ellington performed what is considered his final “full” concert in a
ballroom at Northern Illinois University on March 20, 1974.[citation
needed] The hall was renamed the Duke Ellington Ballroom in 1980.
A statue of Ellington at a piano is featured at the entrance to
UCLA’s Schoenberg Hall. According to UCLA magazine, “When UCLA
students were entranced by Duke Ellington’s provocative tunes at a
Culver City club in 1937, they asked the budding musical great to
play a free concert in Royce Hall. “I’ve been waiting for someone to
ask us!” Ellington exclaimed.
“On the day of the concert, Ellington accidentally mixed up the
venues and drove to USC instead. He eventually arrived at the UCLA
campus and, to apologize for his tardiness, played to the packed
crowd for more than four hours. And so, “Sir Duke” and his group
played the first-ever jazz performance in a concert venue.”[26]
He is of only five jazz musicians ever to have been featured on the
cover of Time (the other four being Louis Armstrong, Thelonious Monk,
Wynton Marsalis, and Dave Brubeck).
Tributes
Sathima Bea Benjamin — South African vocalist wrote “Gift of Love”
in memory of Duke Ellington on her 1987 album Love Light.
Dave Brubeck — dedicated “The Duke” (1954) to Ellington and it
became a standard covered by others,[28] both during Ellington’s
lifetime (such as Miles Davis in 1957 on Miles Ahead) and
posthumously (such as George Shearing in 1992 on I Hear a Rhapsody:
Live at the Blue Note).
Tony Bennett frequently altered the lyrics to “Lullaby of Broadway”
in live performance, to sing, “You rock-a-bye your baby ‘round/to
Ellington or Basie,” as a personal tribute to the two jazz giants.
Judy Collins — wrote “Song For Duke” in 1975, and included it on her
album Judith.
Miles Davis — one month after Ellington’s death, created his
half-hour dedicated dirge “He Loved Him Madly” (1974) collected on
Get Up with It.
The jazz-influenced band Steely Dan recorded a note-for-note version
of an early Ellington standard, “East St. Louis Toodle-oo,” on their
album Pretzel Logic, using treated slide guitars to re-create the
plunger-muted “jungle sound” of the original Ellington horns.
Mercer Ellington — (1919–1996) led The Duke Ellington Orchestra
after his father’s death.
Stevie Wonder — wrote the song “Sir Duke” as a tribute to Ellington
in 1976.
Paul Ellington — leads The Duke Ellington Orchestra (1996-?).
Barrie Lee Hall, Jr — often leads The Duke Ellington Orchestra in
Paul Ellington’s absence. Mr. Hall played in the orchestra under
both the Duke and Mercer.
Charles Mingus — composed “Open Letter to Duke”
Lorraine Feather — has composed lyrics to many of Ellington’s
instrumental compositions,recorded on CD’s including “Dooji Wooji”
and “Such Sweet Thunder.”
The Modern Jazz Quartet composed two original Ellington tributes for
their album “For Ellington.”
Homage from critics
Gunther Schuller wrote, “Ellington composed incessantly to the very
last days of his life. Music was indeed his mistress; it was his
total life and his commitment to it was incomparable and unalterable.
In jazz he was a giant among giants. And in twentieth century music,
he may yet one day be recognized as one of the half-dozen greatest
masters of our time.”[29]
Martin Williams said “Duke Ellington lived long enough to hear
himself named among our best composers. And since his death in 1974,
it has become not at all uncommon to see him named, along with
Charles Ives, as the greatest composer we have produced, regardless
of category.”[30]
In 2002, scholar Molefi Kete Asante listed Duke Ellington on his
list of 100 Greatest African Americans.
Grammy Awards
Ellington earned 13 Grammy awards from 1959 to 2000, nine while he
was alive. |