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Blues In Orbit

Original price was: £22.00.Current price is: £6.60.

SKU: 244991383 Category:

Description

Blues in Orbit lacks the intellectual cachet of the suites and concept pieces that loomed large in Ellingtons recordings of this period, but its an album worth tracking down, if only to hear the band run through a lighter side of its sound indeed, it captures the essence of a late-night recording date that was as much a loose jam as a formal studio date, balancing the spontaneity of the former and the technical polish of the latter. Ellington and company were just back from a European tour when the bulk of this album was recorded, at one after-midnight session in New York on December 2, 1959, to arrangements that had to be hastily written out when the copyist failed to appear for the gig. So on the one hand, the band was kicking back with these shorter pieces; on the other, the group was also improvising freely and intensely at various points. The title-track, recorded more than a year before most of the rest, is a slow blues that puts Ellingtons piano into a call-and-response setting with the horns, with Ellington getting in the last word. Villes Ville Is the Place, Man is a bracing, beat-driven jaunt, highlighted by solos featuring Ray Nance, Harry Carney, and Johnny Hodges on trumpet, baritone sax, and alto, respectively. Three Js Blues shows off composer Jimmy Hamilton playing some earthy tenor sax in a swinging, exuberant blues setting. Smada features Billy Strayhorn on piano and Johnny Hodges on alto, in a stirring dance number. Pie Eyes Blues is a hot studio improvisation featuring Ray Nance and Jimmy Hamilton trading three solos each, while Ellingtons piano and the rest of the band try their emphatic best to get in a word or two. Nance shows up on violin as part of a string of soloists (including Matthew Gee, Paul Gonsalves, Bootie Wood, and Jimmy Hamilton) for C Jam Blues, whose four minutes running time affords the group a chance to jam without overdoing it, or extending matters past the breaking point. Wood is the featured player on muted trombone on the slow, smooth Sweet and Pungent. A pair of more reflective, less extroverted numbers show off the more subtle side of the band, the slow, downbeat Blues in Blueprint, with Jimmy Woodes bass and Harry Carneys bass clarinet as the major featured players, with Strayhorn sitting in on piano and Ellington snapping his fingers; and Swingers Get the Blues, Too, featuring Matthew Gee on baritone horn. The finale, The Swingers Jump, does just that, with Ellington, Hodges, Nance, Gee, Hamilton (on tenor and clarinet), Wood, and Johnson romping and stomping all over the basic riff.
Originally issued in 1960.

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