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Binding: Audio CDEAN: 0074646493229 Format: Live, Original recording remastered Label: Sony Manufacturer: Sony MPN: 64932 Number Of Discs: 2 Publisher: Sony Release Date: May 11, 1999 Studio: Sony Editorial Review: Amazon.com essential recording: When Duke Ellington took his orchestra to the Newport Jazz Festival in 1956, the band was in need of an uplift, some humongous event that would revitalize its image in the wake of bebop, hard bop, and so many more jazz currents. Ellington got the lift he needed when he called "Diminuendo in Blue" with set-closer "Crescendo in Blue" tacked on the end. Tenor saxophonist Paul Gonsalves got the nod from Ellington to segue from "Diminuendo" to "Crescendo," and he blew doors. With one rousing 27-chorus solo, Gonsalves blew a fever into the crowd and jump-started Ellingtonia for another generation. Trouble with all this is that the living document of the Newport show is almost fully manufactured, recorded in a studio with crowd madness dubbed in. So this two-CD historical correction is an awesome addition to the centennial-era reissues on Columbia (including Anatomy of a Murder, Such Sweet Thunder, First Time: Count Meets the Duke, and Black, Brown and Beige). The producers revisited the Newport gig after four decades because they discovered an extant Voice of America tape--the one whose microphone Gonsalves blew his solo into, and the VOA tape catches the whole Newport set in its organic glory. Alternately tender with layers of brushstroke orchestration and blazing with the band's well-seasoned tightness, this new Newport is one for the generalist and the Ellington completist. It's got the revived original gig as well as the original commercial release. And they make great siblings, illustrative of the live-event charm and the music industry's dogged labors in reinventing it on record. --Andrew Bartlett Average Rating:
![]() Rating: - Historical EllingtonFrankly, I tend to agree with the reviewers who think there's simply too much ambiance noises and announcements collected here; perhaps the earlier studio dominated version was not such a bad idea? But, than again, for as Ellington fan(atic)s it is absolutely essential to know all the fascinating details from the booklet and to hear how it all sounded at the spot... This is not only highly pleasant but also historical album, although (I tend to agree with that as well) the band ... Read More Rating: - WOW! Incredible to finally hear this!Not just the famous solo, the REAL Newport concert lives up to it's legend in every way. And the CD engineers have made it sound indeed like a genuine time capsule to yesterday-when giants did walk the earth. (To even concieve of taking two surviving recordings of a 50 year old jazz concert and creating TRUE STEREO) is true genius, and to actually be able to pull it off... They turned an abomination into pure gold. Should be in the collection of every jazz and/or blues fan. So it has a few bum notes.. ... Read More Rating: - A great showcase for the Ellington orchestriaI love best the many popular ballads that Ellington wrote, like "Do Nothing Till You Hear From Me "and many others. This recordings features other compositions for instruments, mostly the whole band, and they are not limited in duration due to the LP format, and some of them run quite long, almost mini-symphonies, with many extended solos from Johnny Hodges and others. There are no romantic ballads, no vocals, but excellent big band jazz. Rating: - The last Gasp of the Big Band EraPerhaps that isn't a totally fair statement but rock and roll meant the end of the big band era. Here the Ellington band got back together after a short hiatus and produced some great music. I like the Newport Suite and the standards. Jimmy Hamilton, an underrated clarinetist, is very impressive. And of course, Johnny Hodges, Harry Carney, Clark Terry and Britt Woodman contribute great solos. Diminuendo in Blue and Crescendo in Blue is exciting but the solo by Paul Gonsalves has always been overrated. ... Read More Rating: - What ELSE is on this CD? Who really cares?I've owned this record ("record" - what an old-fashioned word!), in some form or another, for about thirty-five years. And today is Duke's birthday anniversary, and Diminuendo and Crescendo was on the radio, and I listened. And the goosebumps came, and the tears of joy and emotion still flowed. The sense of occasion is matched by the magnificence of the performance - one of the greatest ever performances by the greatest band of all time. And, by the way, a masterpiece composition which did not receive its due ... Read More |