Duke Ellington – …And His Mother Called Him Bill (1968/2018) [FLAC 24 bit, 96 kHz]

Duke Ellington - ...And His Mother Called Him Bill (1968/2018) [FLAC 24 bit, 96 kHz] Download

Artist: Duke Ellington
Album: …And His Mother Called Him Bill
Genre: Jazz
Release Date: 1968/2018
Audio Format:: FLAC (tracks) 24 bit, 96 kHz
Duration: 44:28
Total Tracks: 12
Total Size: 1001 MB

Tracklist:

1-01. Duke Ellington – Snibor (04:18)
1-02. Duke Ellington – Boo-Dah (03:29)
1-03. Duke Ellington – Blood Count (04:20)
1-04. Duke Ellington – U.M.M.G (03:16)
1-05. Duke Ellington – Charpoy (03:09)
1-06. Duke Ellington – After All (03:54)
1-07. Duke Ellington – The Intimacy of the Blues (02:58)
1-08. Duke Ellington – Raincheck (04:38)
1-09. Duke Ellington – Day-Dream (04:26)
1-10. Duke Ellington – Rock Skippin’ at the Blue Note (03:02)
1-11. Duke Ellington – All Day Long (02:59)
1-12. Duke Ellington – Lotus Blossom (03:54)

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When Billy Strayhorn died of cancer in 1967, Duke Ellington was devastated. His closest friend and arranger had left his life full of music and memories. As a tribute, Ellington and his orchestra almost immediately began recording a tribute to Strayhorn, using the late arranger’s own compositions.

The album features well-known and previously unrecorded Strayhorn tunes that showcase his range, versatility, and, above all, the quality that Ellington admired him most for: his sensitivity to all of the timbral, tonal, and color possibilities an orchestra could bring to a piece of music.

Full of informality and soulful verve, these recordings feel like they are an afterthought, an unwillingness to completely let go, a eulogy whose final words are questions, elegantly stated and met with only the echo of their last vibrations ringing in an empty room, full of wondering, longing, and helplessness, but above all the point of the questions themselves: “Is this enough?” or “Can there ever be enough to pay an adequate tribute to this man?”

They are interesting questions, because only five years later we would all be saying the same thing about Ellington. For a man who issued well over 300 albums, this set is among his most profoundly felt and very finest recorded moments.”When Billy Strayhorn died of cancer in 1967, Duke Ellington was devastated. His closest friend and arranger had left his life full of music and memories. As a tribute, Ellington and his orchestra almost immediately began recording a tribute to Strayhorn, using the late arranger’s own compositions and charts. The album features well-known and previously unrecorded Strayhorn tunes that showcased his range, versatility, and above all, the quality that Ellington admired him most for: his sensitivity to all the timbral, tonal, and color possibilities an orchestra could bring to a piece of music.” (All Music Guide)

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