music.wikisort.org - CompositionEllington at Newport is a 1956 live jazz album by Duke Ellington and his band of their 1956 concert at the Newport Jazz Festival, a concert which revitalized Ellington's flagging career. Jazz promoter George Wein describes the 1956 concert as "the greatest performance of [Ellington's] career... It stood for everything that jazz had been and could be."[5] It is included in the book 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die, which ranks it "one of the most famous... in jazz history".[6] Jazz journalist Scott Yanow wrote that Ellington's performance at the 1956 Newport Jazz Festival caused a sensation that fueled the rest of his career.[7] The original release was partly recreated in the studio after the Ellington Orchestra's festival appearance.
1956 live album by Duke Ellington
Ellington at Newport |
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Released | November 1956 |
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Recorded | July 7-8, 1956 |
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Genre | Jazz |
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Length | 1956 LP: 43:53 1999 CD: 2:09:57 |
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Label | Columbia |
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Producer | 1956 LP: George Avakian 1999 CD: Phil Schaap |
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Duke Ellington Presents... (1956) |
Ellington at Newport (1956) |
Duke Ellington and the Buck Clayton All-Stars at Newport, Vol. 2 (1956) |
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Professional ratingsReview scores |
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Source | Rating |
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AllMusic |     [1] |
Tom Hull | A+[2] |
The Penguin Guide to Jazz Recordings |    [3] |
The Rolling Stone Jazz Record Guide |     [4] |
Ellington released a follow-up album also recorded at the Newport Jazz Festival, Newport 1958, two years later.
In 2022, the album was selected by the Library of Congress for preservation in the United States National Recording Registry as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant".[8]
Context
Many big bands folded by the mid-1950s, but Ellington kept his band working, occasionally doing shows in ice-skating rinks to stay busy. The Duke Ellington Orchestra did European tours during the early 1950s, and Ellington was chiefly supporting the band himself through royalties earned on his popular compositions of the 1920s to the 1940s. At the time of the festival, the band did not even have a record deal.[5]
Beginning
| This section needs additional citations for verification. (June 2011) |
Duke and his orchestra arrived to play at the Newport Jazz Festival at a time when jazz festivals were a fairly new innovation. Ellington's band was the first and last group to play at the Newport Festival.[5] The first, short set began at 8:30 and included "The Star-Spangled Banner", "Black and Tan Fantasy" and "Tea for Two". This set was played without a few of the band's members as they were unable to be found at the start of the show.
After performances by the other groups, the remainder of the band was located and the real performance began. Duke led off with "Take the 'A' Train", followed by a new composition by Duke and Billy Strayhorn, a suite of three pieces: "Festival Junction", "Blues to Be There", and "Newport Up". This suite was intended to be the showstopper, but the reception was not as enthusiastic as was hoped.
Following the Festival suite, Duke called for Harry Carney's baritone saxophone performance of "Sophisticated Lady". Then the orchestra played "Day In, Day Out". Following this, Duke announced that they were pulling out "some of our 1938 vintage": "Diminuendo and Crescendo in Blue" joined by an improvised interval, which Duke announced would be played by tenor saxophonist Paul Gonsalves.
The Gonsalves solo
Ellington had been experimenting with the reworking for several years before the Newport performance; a release of one of his Carnegie Hall concerts of the 1940s presented the two old blues joined by a wordless vocal passage, "Transbluecency," but in time he chose to join the pair by a saxophone solo, handing it to Gonsalves, experimenting with it in shorter performances before the Newport show, where Ellington is believed to have told Gonsalves to blow as long as he felt like blowing when the solo slot came. It came after two choruses of an Ellington piano break at what was formerly the conclusion of "Diminuendo in Blue."
As performed at Newport, the experiment ended up revamping the Ellington reputation and fortune for the rest of Ellington's life. The previous experiments culminated in a 27-chorus solo by Gonsalves — simple, but powerful — backed only by bassist Jimmy Woode, drummer Sam Woodyard, and Ellington himself pounding punctuating piano chords and (with several audible band members as well) hollering urgings-on ("Come on, Paul — dig in! Dig in!") to his soloist. The normally sedate crowd was on their feet dancing in the aisles, reputedly provoked by a striking platinum blonde woman in a black evening dress, Elaine Anderson, getting up and dancing enthusiastically.[9][10][11] When the solo ended and Gonsalves collapsed in exhaustion, Ellington himself took over for two choruses of piano solo before the full band returned for the "Crescendo in Blue" portion, finishing with a rousing finale featuring high-note trumpeter Cat Anderson.
Ending
After that performance, pandemonium took over. Duke calmed the crowd by announcing: "If you've heard of the saxophone, then you've heard of Johnny Hodges." Duke's best known alto saxophonist then played two of his most famous numbers in "I Got It Bad (and That Ain't Good)" followed by "Jeep's Blues". Still the crowd refused to disperse so Duke called for Ray Nance to sing "Tulip or Turnip". The festival's organizers tried to cut off the show at this point but once again were met with angry refusals to end the evening.
Duke told the announcer that he would end the show and wanted to thank the audience but instead announced he had a "very heavy request for Sam Woodyard in 'Skin Deep'", a number written by former Ellington drummer Louis Bellson. This drum solo feature was the final number featured, followed by a farewell from Duke over "Mood Indigo". In his farewell, he thanked the crowd for the "wonderful way in which you've inspired us this evening." He then finished with his trademark statement: "You are very beautiful, very sweet and we do love you madly." With that, the historic show concluded.
Recordings
Columbia Records recorded the concert and an album soon followed. Duke appeared soon after on the cover of Time, and his resurgent popularity lasted throughout the rest of his life. Some of his most critically acclaimed albums occurred during the next decade and a half, until age and illness began to claim some of Duke's band members and, in 1974, Ellington himself.
In 1996, a tape discovered in the Voice of America's archive of its radio broadcasts revealed that the 1956 album had indeed been fabricated with studio performances mixed with some live recordings and artificial applause. Only about 40 percent of the 1956 recording was actually live.[12] The reason for this was that Ellington felt the under-rehearsed Festival suite had not been performed up to recording release standards, and he wished to have a better version on tape if it was to be issued on record. Producer George Avakian did as Ellington asked and the band entered the studio immediately after the festival. Avakian mixed in the studio version with portions of the live performance. The applause was dubbed onto the original release to cover up the fact that Gonsalves had been playing into the wrong microphone and was often completely inaudible.
On the 1999 reissue, the Voice of America live recording and live Columbia tapes were painstakingly pieced together using digital technology to create a stereophonic recording of the best-known Ellington performance of the past 50 years, this time with Gonsalves' solo clearly heard, though the beginning of the audience cheering and noise at around the seventh or eighth chorus of the solo can still be heard as well.[13] (Stereophonic LP records were not mass-produced until 1957, the year after the recording.)[14]
Track listing
Original 1956 LP: Ellington at Newport
Side A
- "Festival Junction" - 10:08
- "Blues to Be There" - 8:04
- "Newport Up" - 5:33
Side B
- "Jeep's Blues" - 5:12
- "Diminuendo and Crescendo in Blue" - 14:56
Remastered 1999 CD: Ellington at Newport (Complete)
Disc one
- "The Star-Spangled Banner" - 1:10
- Father Norman O'Connor Introduces Duke & the Orchestra / Duke Introduces Tune & Anderson, Jackson & Procope - 3:36
- "Black and Tan Fantasy" - 6:21
- Duke Introduces Cook & Tune - 0:26
- "Tea for Two" - 3:34
- Duke & Band Leave Stage / Father Norman Talks About The Festival - 2:30
- "Take the 'A' Train" - 4:27
- Duke Announces Strayhorn's A Train & Nance / Duke Introduces Festival Suite, Part I & Hamilton - 0:41
- "Part I - Festival Junction" - 8:10
- Duke Announces Soloists; Introduces Part II - 0:38
- "Part II - Blues to Be There" - 7:09
- Duke Announces Nance & Procope; Introduces Part III - 0:19
- "Part III - Newport Up" - 5:33
- Duke Announces Hamilton, Gonsalves & Terry / Duke Introduces Carney & Tune - 0:25
- "Sophisticated Lady" - 3:52
- Duke Announces Grissom & Tune - 0:17
- "Day In, Day Out" - 3:50
- Duke Introduces Tune(s) and Paul Gonsalves Interludes - 0:23
- "Diminuendo and Crescendo In Blue" - 14:20
- Announcements, Pandemonium - 0:44
- Pause Track - 0:06
Disc two
- Duke Introduces Johnny Hodges - 0:18
- "I Got It Bad (and That Ain't Good)" - 3:38
- "Jeep's Blues" - 4:36
- Duke Calms Crowd; Introduces Nance & Tune - 0:42
- "Tulip or Turnip" - 2:49
- Riot Prevention - 1:08
- "Skin Deep" - 9:13
- "Mood Indigo" - 1:30
- Studio Concert (Excerpts) - 4:01
- Father Norman O'Connor Introduces Duke Ellington / Duke Introduces New Work, Part I & Hamilton - 1:02
- "Part I - Festival Junction" - 8:46
- Duke Announces Soloists; Introduces Part II - 0:32
- "Part II - Blues To Be There" - 7:48
- Duke Announces Nance & Procope; Introduces Part III" - 0:16
- "Part III - Newport Up" - 5:20
- Duke Announces Hamilton, Gonsalves & Terry / Pause / Duke Introduces Johnny Hodges - 0:41
- "I Got It Bad (And That Ain't Good)" - 3:47
- "Jeep's Blues" - 4:31
- Pause Track - 0:06
- Tracks 9-19 on CD2 were not part of the original performance.
Personnel
- Duke Ellington – piano
- Cat Anderson – trumpet
- Willie Cook – trumpet
- Ray Nance – trumpet, vocals
- Clark Terry – trumpet
- Quentin Jackson – trombone
- Lawrence Brown - trombone
- John Sanders – trombone
- Britt Woodman – trombone
- Johnny Hodges – alto saxophone
- Russell Procope – alto saxophone, clarinet
- Paul Gonsalves – tenor saxophone
- Harry Carney – baritone saxophone
- Jimmy Hamilton – clarinet
- Jimmy Woode – double bass
- Al Lucas - bass
- Jimmy Grissom – vocals
- Sam Woodyard – drums
References
- AllMusic review
- Hull, Tom (n.d.). "Essential Jazz Albums of the 1950s". tomhull.com. Retrieved March 12, 2020.
- Cook, Richard; Morton, Brian (2008). The Penguin Guide to Jazz Recordings (9th ed.). Penguin. p. 434. ISBN 978-0-141-03401-0.
- Swenson, J., ed. (1985). The Rolling Stone Jazz Record Guide. USA: Random House/Rolling Stone. pp. 69. ISBN 0-394-72643-X.
- Wein, George; Chinen, Nate (2003). Myself Among Other: A Life in Music. Cambridge, MA: Da Capo Press. pp. 151–156. ISBN 0-306-81352-1. Retrieved April 4, 2010.
- Dimery, Robert, 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die (2008 edition), p. 30.
- Yanow, Scott (2020-11-12). "10 Essential Duke Ellington Albums". ClassicRockHistory.com. Retrieved 2021-04-24.
- Ulaby, Neda (13 April 2022). "The Library of Congress adds 25 titles, including Alicia Keys and Ricky Martin". NPR. Retrieved 13 April 2022.
- Levene, Andrea (April 21, 2004). "Elaine Anderson, 80; activist, ex-dancer". Boston Globe. Retrieved July 26, 2015.
Before Elaine (Zeitz) Anderson became an influential activist in Boston's Back Bay, she made her mark in jazz by dancing near the stage as Duke Ellington's band performed at the Newport Jazz Festival in 1956. A photograph from this event would later become the cover of one of Ellington's most popular albums. ...
- Morton, John Fass (2008). Backstory in Blue: Ellington at Newport '56. New Brunswick, New Jersey: Rutgers University Press. ISBN 978-0-8135-4282-9. Retrieved April 4, 2010.
- Avakian, George. Liner notes to original release of Ellington at Newport, Columbia Records CL 934, 1956.
- Bailey, C. Michael (August 10, 2005). "Duke Ellington: The Complete Live at Newport 1956". All About Jazz. Retrieved April 3, 2010.
- Schaap, Phil. Liner notes to Ellington at Newport (Complete), Columbia Records / Legacy C2K 64932, February 1999.
- "Mass Produced Stereo Disc is Demonstrated," Billboard, December 16, 1957, p. 27.
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Discography |
Studio albums |
- Harlem Jazz, 1930
- Ellingtonia, Vol. One
- Ellingtonia, Vol. Two
- Braggin' in Brass: The Immortal 1938 Year
- The Blanton–Webster Band
- Never No Lament: The Blanton-Webster Band
- Smoke Rings
- Liberian Suite
- Great Times!
- Masterpieces by Ellington
- Ellington Uptown
- The Duke Plays Ellington
- Ellington '55
- Dance to the Duke!
- Ellington Showcase
- Historically Speaking
- Duke Ellington Presents...
- The Complete Porgy and Bess
- A Drum Is a Woman
- Studio Sessions, Chicago 1956
- Such Sweet Thunder
- Studio Sessions 1957 & 1962
- Ellington Indigos
- Black, Brown and Beige
- Duke Ellington at the Bal Masque
- The Cosmic Scene
- Happy Reunion
- Jazz Party
- Back to Back
- Side by Side
- Anatomy of a Murder
- Festival Session
- Blues in Orbit
- The Nutcracker Suite
- Piano in the Background
- Swinging Suites by Edward E. and Edward G.
- Unknown Session
- Piano in the Foreground
- The Great Summit: The Master Takes
- Paris Blues
- Featuring Paul Gonsalves
- Midnight in Paris
- Duke Ellington Meets Coleman Hawkins
- Studio Sessions, New York 1962
- Money Jungle
- Afro-Bossa
- The Symphonic Ellington
- Duke Ellington's Jazz Violin Session
- Studio Sessions New York 1963
- My People
- Ellington '65
- Duke Ellington Plays Mary Poppins
- Ellington '66
- Concert in the Virgin Islands
- The Popular Duke Ellington
- Far East Suite
- The Jaywalker
- Studio Sessions, 1957, 1965, 1966, 1967, San Francisco, Chicago, New York
- ...And His Mother Called Him Bill
- Second Sacred Concert
- Studio Sessions New York, 1968
- Latin American Suite
- The Pianist
- New Orleans Suite
- Orchestral Works
- The Suites, New York 1968 & 1970
- The Intimacy of the Blues
- The Afro-Eurasian Eclipse
- Studio Sessions New York & Chicago, 1965, 1966 & 1971
- The Intimate Ellington
- The Ellington Suites
- This One's for Blanton!
- Up in Duke's Workshop
- Duke's Big 4
- Mood Ellington
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Live albums | |
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Collaborations | |
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Compositions | by Billy Strayhorn |
- "Take the "A" Train"
- "Lush Life"
- "Chelsea Bridge"
- "Something to Live For"
- "Satin Doll"
- "Blood Count"
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by Juan Tizol | |
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Orchestra members |
- Hayes Alvis
- Cat Anderson
- Ivie Anderson
- Harold Ashby
- Alice Babs
- Shorty Baker
- Butch Ballard
- Art Baron
- Aaron Bell
- Louie Bellson
- Joe Benjamin
- Barney Bigard
- Lou Blackburn
- Jimmy Blanton
- Wellman Braud
- Lawrence Brown
- Harry Carney
- Johnny Coles
- Willie Cook
- Buster Cooper
- Kay Davis
- Wild Bill Davis
- Wilbur de Paris
- Bobby Durham
- Mercer Ellington
- Rolf Ericson
- Jimmy Forrest
- Victor Gaskin
- Peter Giger
- Tyree Glenn
- Paul Gonsalves
- Sonny Greer
- Fred Guy
- Jimmy Hamilton
- Otto Hardwick
- Shelton Hemphill
- Rick Henderson
- Al Hibbler
- Johnny Hodges
- Major Holley
- Charlie Irvis
- Quentin Jackson
- Hilton Jefferson
- Herb Jeffries
- Freddie Jenkins
- Money Johnson
- Herbie Jones
- Wallace Jones
- Taft Jordan
- Al Killian
- Queen Esther Marrow
- Wendell Marshall
- Murray McEachern
- Louis Metcalf
- James "Bubber" Miley
- Harold "Geezil" Minerve
- Ray Nance
- Tricky Sam Nanton
- Oscar Pettiford
- Eddie Preston
- Russell Procope
- Junior Raglin
- Betty Roché
- Ernie Royal
- Al Sears
- Joya Sherrill
- Willie Smith
- Elmer Snowden
- Rex Stewart
- Billy Strayhorn
- Billy Taylor
- Clark Terry
- Juan Tizol
- Norris Turney
- Ben Webster
- Arthur Whetsel
- Cootie Williams
- Nelson Williams
- Skippy Williams
- Booty Wood
- Jimmy Woode
- Britt Woodman
- Sam Woodyard
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Related | |
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Clark Terry |
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Years given are for the recording(s), not first release. |
As leader or co-leader | |
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With Duke Ellington | |
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With Johnny Hodges | |
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With Quincy Jones | |
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With Herbie Mann | |
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With Oliver Nelson | |
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With others |
- My Kinda Swing (Ernestine Anderson, 1959)
- Gloomy Sunday and Other Bright Moments (Bob Brookmeyer, 1961)
- Soul Summit Vol. 2 (Gene Ammons, 1961)
- Late Hour Special (Gene Ammons, 1961–62)
- Velvet Soul (Gene Ammons, 1962)
- One Foot in the Gutter (Dave Bailey, 1960)
- Gettin' Into Somethin' (Dave Bailey, 1960)
- Goodies (George Benson, 1968)
- Bobo's Beat (Willie Bobo, 1968)
- Jam Session (Clifford Brown, 1954)
- Ruth Brown '65 (Ruth Brown, 1964)
- Who Is Gary Burton? (1962)
- Byrd at the Gate (Charlie Byrd, 1963)
- Son of Drum Suite (Al Cohn, 1960)
- The Magic Touch (Tadd Dameron, 1962)
- Afro-Jaws (Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis, 1960)
- Trane Whistle (Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis, 1960)
- Listen to Art Farmer and the Orchestra (1962)
- Ella Abraça Jobim (Ella Fitzgerald, 1980–81)
- Big Band Bossa Nova (Stan Getz, 1962)
- Stan Getz Plays Music from the Soundtrack of Mickey One (1965)
- Gillespiana (Dizzy Gillespie, 1960)
- Carnegie Hall Concert (Dizzy Gillespie, 1961)
- Cookin' (Paul Gonsalves, 1957)
- The Big Soul-Band (Johnny Griffin, 1960)
- White Gardenia (Johnny Griffin, 1961)
- Homage to Duke (Dave Grusin, 1993)
- The Further Adventures of El Chico (Chico Hamilton, 1966)
- It's About Time (Jimmy Hamilton, 1961)
- You Better Know It!!! (Lionel Hampton, 1964)
- Really Big! (Jimmy Heath, 1960)
- Friends Old and New (John Hicks, 1992)
- Yoyogi National Stadium, Tokyo 1983: Return to Happiness (JATP, 1983)
- Budd Johnson and the Four Brass Giants (1960)
- J.J.! (J.J. Johnson, 1964)
- Goodies (J.J. Johnson, 1965)
- Concepts in Blue (J.J. Johnson, 1980)
- Summit Meeting (Elvin Jones, 1977)
- Down Home (Sam Jones, 1962)
- At Newport '63 (Lambert, Hendricks & Bavan, 1963)
- The Centaur and the Phoenix (Yusef Lateef, 1960)
- Themes from Mr. Lucky, The Untouchables and Other TV Action Jazz (Mundell Lowe, 1960)
- Satan in High Heels (Mundell Lowe, 1961)
- The Soul of Hollywood (Junior Mance, 1962)
- The Jazz Version of "How to Succeed in Business without Really Trying" (Gary McFarland, 1961)
- Tijuana Jazz (Gary McFarland, 1965)
- Mingus Revisited/Pre-Bird (Charles Mingus, 1960)
- The Complete Town Hall Concert (Charles Mingus, 1962)
- Smooth as the Wind (Blue Mitchell, 1960–61)
- A Sure Thing (Blue Mitchell, 1962)
- Jazz Dialogue (Modern Jazz Quartet, 1965)
- Gerry Mulligan and the Concert Jazz Band at the Village Vanguard (1960)
- Gerry Mulligan '63 (Gerry Mulligan, 1962)
- That's How I Love the Blues! (Mark Murphy, 1962)
- Nine Flags (Chico O'Farrill, 1966)
- Oscar Peterson and the Trumpet Kings – Jousts (1974)
- The Alternate Blues (Oscar Peterson, 1980)
- The Trumpet Summit Meets the Oscar Peterson Big 4 (1980)
- Basically Duke (Oscar Pettiford, 1954)
- The Trumpet Kings Meet Joe Turner (Big Joe Turner, 1974)
- Bossa Nova Carnival (Dave Pike, 1962)
- Jazz for the Jet Set (Dave Pike, 1965)
- Sonny Rollins and the Big Brass (1958)
- New Fantasy (Lalo Schifrin, 1964)
- Once a Thief and Other Themes (Lalo Schifrin, 1965)
- Hobo Flats (Jimmy Smith, 1963)
- The Matadors Meet the Bull (Sonny Stitt, 1965)
- I Keep Comin' Back! (Sonny Stitt, 1966)
- Taylor Made Jazz (Billy Taylor, 1959)
- New York City R&B (Cecil Taylor, 1961)
- Kwamina (Billy Taylor, 1961)
- Out of the Storm (Ed Thigpen, 1966)
- Devil May Care (Teri Thornton, 1960–61)
- Joyride (Stanley Turrentine, 1965)
- Live at Newport (McCoy Tyner, 1963)
- Dinah Jams (Dinah Washington, 1954)
- Uhuru Afrika (Randy Weston, 1960)
- At Newport '63 (with Joe Williams, 1963)
- New York, New Sound (Gerald Wilson, 2003)
- Kai Olé (Kai Winding, 1961)
- The Colorful Strings of Jimmy Woode (Jimmy Woode, 1957)
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На других языках
- [en] Ellington at Newport
[es] Ellington at Newport
Ellington En Newport es un álbum en vivo del pianista de jazz Duke Ellington y su orquesta, grabado en el Newport Festival de Jazz y lanzado en 1956. Se considera como su regreso triunfal de su carrera. Está incluido en el libro 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die.
[ru] Ellington at Newport
Ellington at Newport — концертный альбом 1956 года Дюка Эллингтона и его оркестра.
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