Monday, April 29, 2024

“Something” for Duke Ellington’s birthday

“Something” is the fourth section of The Goutleas Suite, recorded April 27, 1971. The suite memorializes Ellington’s 1966 visit to the restored thirteenth-century Château de Goutelas. From his spoken remarks on the occasion, as given in his Music Is My Mistress (1973):

“To be here to help celebrate the rebuilding of this beautiful château by men who came together from the greatest extremes of religious, political, and intellectual beliefs is an experience, and a majestic manifestation of humanism, that I shall never forget. They did not merely make a donation that others might roll up their sleeves to work; they rolled up their own sleeves and worked. To be accepted as a brother by these heroic human beings leaves me breathless.”
I chose “Something,” of all things, for two reasons: it captures the luminous serenity that I hear in a number of late Ellington recordings, and it brings to mind a well-known comment from André Previn:
“You know, Stan Kenton can stand in front of a thousand fiddles and a thousand brass and make a dramatic gesture and every studio arranger can nod his head and say, Oh, yes, that’s done like this. But Duke merely lifts his finger, three horns make a sound, and I don’t know what it is!”
I think the three horns at the beginning of “Something” are flute, tenor saxophone, and trumpet. That’s my guess.

Related reading
All OCA Ellington posts (Pinboard) : Ellington at Goutelas (A Life photograph)

[Personnel: Cootie Williams, Mercer Ellington, Money Johnson, Eddie Preston, trumpets; Booty Wood, Malcolm Taylor, Chuck Connors, trombones; Harold Minerve, Norris Turney, Paul Gonsalves, Harold Ashby, Harry Carney, reeds; Duke Ellington, composer and piano; Joe Benjamin, bass; Rufus Jones, drums. The recording was first available on The Ellington Suites (Pablo, 1976), and is now available on CD (OJC, 2013).]

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