I LET A SONG GO OUT OF MY HEART
DUKE ELLINGTON ORCHESTRA
SONGWRITER: DUKE ELLINGTON
COUNTRY: U. S. A.
ALBUM: GOLDEN GREATES
LABEL: RCA VICTOR
GENRE: JAZZ
YEAR: 1938
Edward Kennedy "Duke" Ellington (April
29, 1899 – May 24, 1974) was an American composer, pianist, and leader of a jazz orchestra,
which he led from 1923 until his death over a career spanning more than six
decades.
Born in Washington,
D.C., Ellington was based in New York City from the mid-1920s onward and gained a national profile through his
orchestra's appearances at the Cotton
Club in Harlem. In the 1930s, his orchestra toured
in Europe. Although widely considered a pivotal figure in the
history of jazz,
Ellington embraced the phrase "beyond category" as a liberating
principle and referred to his music as part of the more general category of
American Music.
Some of the jazz musicians who were members
of Ellington's orchestra, such as saxophonist Johnny Hodges,
are considered among the best players in the idiom. Ellington melded them into the
best-known orchestral unit in the history of jazz. Some members stayed with the
orchestra for several decades. A master at writing miniatures
for the three-minute 78 rpm recording format, Ellington wrote more than one
thousand compositions; his extensive body of work is the largest recorded
personal jazz legacy, and many of his pieces have become standards.
He also recorded songs written by his bandsmen, for example Juan Tizol's
"Caravan",
and "Perdido",
which brought a Spanish tinge to big band jazz. In the early 1940s, Ellington began a nearly
thirty-year collaboration with composer-arranger-pianist Billy Strayhorn,
whom he called his writing and arranging companion. With Strayhorn, he composed
many extended compositions, or suites, as well as additional short pieces.
Following an appearance at the Newport
Jazz Festival in July 1956, Ellington and his
orchestra enjoyed a major revival and embarked on world tours. Ellington recorded for most
American record companies of his era, performed in and scored several films,
and composed a handful of stage musicals.
Ellington
was noted for his inventive use of the orchestra, or big band, and for his eloquence
and charisma. His reputation continued to rise after he died, and he
was awarded a posthumous Pulitzer Prize Special Award for music in 1999.
The melody of “I Let a Song Go Out of My
Heart” is one of Ellington’s most beguiling, and memorable. The fact that
Ellington had composed this song, made an arrangement of it for his band, and
actually recorded it before the opening of the spring 1938 Cotton Club Parade,
indicates to me that he was happy with what he had created.
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