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Showing posts with label duke ellington. Show all posts
Showing posts with label duke ellington. Show all posts

Saturday, November 19, 2011

One of the best, IMHO.....Ms. Ivie Anderson

Ivie Anderson

July 10, 1905 - December, 1949 


Considered one of the finest singers of the golden age of jazz, Ivie Anderson was a fluent vocalist who impressed many with her blues and scat phrasings. Most impressed was Duke Ellington, who kept her on as vocalist for eleven years and is thought to be the best singer he ever had.

Born in California, young Ivie received vocal training at her local St. Mary's Convent and later spent two years studying with Sara Ritt in Washington, DC. Returning home she found work with Curtis Mosby, Paul Howard, Sonny Clay, and briefly with Anson Weeks at the Mark Hopkins Hotel in Los Angeles. She also found work in vaudeville, touring the country as a dancer and vocalist in the Fanchon and Marco revue, starring Mamie Smith, and with the Shuffle Along revue. She was featured vocalist at the Culver City Cotton Club before leaving to tour Australia in 1928 with Sonny Clay. Returning after five months down under she organized her own show and toured the U.S. In 1930 she found work with Earl Hines.It was while appearing with Hines that Ellington first heard her sing. He hired her in February 1931, and she quickly became a fixture of the orchestra's sound.

“The Voice of Ellington,” the beautiful and stylish Anderson was with the bandleader for eleven years, a term longer than any other of his vocalists. With a relaxed style, light tone and superb diction she would competently perform blues, ballads, and novelty songs with both enthusiasm and ease. “It Don’t Mean a Thing” was the first of her many recording hits with Duke Ellington and His Orchestra which include: “I’m Satisfied,” (1933) “Cotton,” (1935) “Isn’t Love the Strangest Thing?” (1936) “Love Is Like a Cigarette,” (1936) “There’s a Lull in My Life,” (1937) “All God’s Children Got Rhythm,” (1937) “If You Were in My Place,” (1938) “At a Dixie Road Diner,” (1940) and “I Got It Bad (and That Ain’t Good)” (1941).

Retiring in 1942, due to chronic asthma, she opened her own Chicken Shack restaurant in Los Angeles. Though continuing to sing regularly in West Coast nightclubs her medical condition kept her from recording or touring extensively and ultimately led to her early death. Ivie Anderson passed away in December of 1949.


If you don't know her, give a listen.....one of the best, IMHO......


Alabamy Home
All God's Chillun Got Rhythm
Chocloate Shake
Cotton
Delta bound
Ebony Rhapsody
Get yourself a new broom
Hayfoot, Strawfoot
I Got it Bad and That Ain't Good
I thought you ought to know
I'm Checkin' Out, Goo'm Bye
I'm Satisfied
I've Got the World on a String
I've Got to be a Rug Cutter
If You Were In My Place (What Would You Do)
Isn't Love the Strangest Thing
It Don't Mean a Thing
It Was a Sad Night in Harlem
Jump for Joy
Killin' Myself
La De Doody Doo
Let's Have a Jubilee
Love is Like A Cigarette
Me and You
Mexico Joe
Mood Indigo
My Old Flame
Oh Babe! Maybe Someday
Raisin' the rent
Rocks in My Bed
Shoe Shine Boy
Solitude
Stormy Weather
Tall dark and handsome
The voot is here to stay
There's a Lull in My Life
Troubled Waters
Truckin'
You Gave Me The Gate


As a child at St. Marys






Sunday, July 3, 2011

Tonight's OTR: A first episode of AFRS Jubilee-10-09-1942...Duke Ellington, Ethel Waters, and more....

The inaugural AFRS Jubilee......10-09-1942.....Rex Ingram announcing, Duke Ellington, Ethel Waters, Ediie "Rochester" Anderson....nice one tonight :)

http://www.megaupload.com/?d=VL606LHS

Friday, January 7, 2011

A Friday night "Date with Duke"..........May 19, 1945

A nice one for tonight...a little bit of Ellingtonia...a broadcast from the Paradise Theater..."Date with Duke", episode 8...May 19, 1945....enjoy. :)

http://www.4shared.com/file/WC85uqk-/duke-45-05-19-08-broadcast-fro.html

Monday, November 29, 2010

Today's OTR Part II..........Duke Ellington...Broadcast from the 400...1945

A big band remote OTR tonight --  "A Date with Duke"..........April 28, 1945..from the 400 Club 5th Ave and 43rd St. NYC.......... Enjoy.

http://www.4shared.com/file/qQXoDxWW/duke-45-04-28-05-broadcast-fro.html

Friday, November 26, 2010

A Tommy Dorsey Show OTR from 1946 w/ guest Duke Ellington

A nice one.........very nice. From August 8, 1946........with a lot of music from the boys and The Duke, plus a lot of a great conversation and bad jokes..........lol. You'll enjoy this one.........a definite keeper.

http://www.4shared.com/file/12W8WNU1/46-08-25epxxxxTheTommyDorseySh.html

Thursday, November 4, 2010

Duke Ellington-live at The Hurricane-New York 1944




Duke Ellington Orch. feat. Al Hibbler



05/06/1944
Perdido
Do nothin' til you hear from me
My gal Sal
Now I know
05/07/1944
Jumpin' punkins
Poinciana
It don't mean a thing
05/24/1944
Clemintine
Someone
05/27/1944
G.I Jive
Three Cent stomp
Johnny come lately
Blue skies
Sentimental lady
05/31/1944
Midriff
06/02/1944
Main Stem
My little brown book
06/04/1944
Too much in love
Mood to be wooed

Rex Stewart, Shelton Hemphill (trumpet)
Taft Jordan (trumpet, vocals on 7)
Ray Nance (trumpet, violin, vocals on 7)
Joe Nanton, Lawrence Brown, Claude Jones (trombone)
Johnny Hodges, Otto Hardwicke (alto sax)
Jimmy Hamilton (tenor sax, clarinet)
Skippy Williams (tenor sax from 1 to 7)
Al Sears (tenor sax from 8 to 19)
Harry Carney (baritone sax)
Duke Ellington (piano)
Junior Raglin (bass)
Sonny Greer (drums)
Al Hibbler (vocals on 2 and 17)

New York, The Hurricane, from May, 6 to June, 4 1944




http://www.mediafire.com/?ps63p433dcauf4w