œ œ œ œ œ Œ J œ œ J œ Œ Jœ 3 ? b b œ Y YYY q = 112? b b 4 4 œ. œ _ 1

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Example 2-2 q = 112? b b 4 4. _ 1 B b. 0 J tight plunger b J oe Tricky Sam Nanton Toodle-Oo and other staples of the band s repertory during these years, Black and Tan s recorded several times. On the recording of November 1927, Bubber Miley s on one of his temporary leaves from the Ellington band. Jabbo Smith filled in, but one of the sections originally played by Miley s covered on this date by Nanton. The blues spot that Nanton normally filled s played with particular distinction on this session (Example 2-2). J b o u growl wuh b wuh 4? b b b wuh E b J a (no tongue) J a a 8? b b Y YYY B b b n. J B b Ó (whinny) no growl - a - a- a Nanton s first two measures are played into tight plunger, that is, the plunger s held very close to the bell of the instrument. On the first note of measure two, however, the plunger is opened considerably more than on the other notes of this phrase. A heavy growl starts in measure three, and the plunger opens just slightly to produce an u sound, followed by three muffled sounding wuh s. These turn into more characteristic s in measure four as Nanton opens and closes on each note through the end of measure five. The repeated triplet figure of measure six is played with the plunger held somewhat open throughout. It also seems that no tongue s used in measures six through eight. In measures eight and nine, Nanton performed one of his most distinctive plunger effects ever. No established musical

Th e U n i q u e J u a n Ti z o l 67 Tizol s part for his own composition Bakiff, written in his own hand. Duke Ellington Collection, Archives Center, National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution. Music by Juan Tizol. Copyright 1942 (Renewed) by Tempo Music, Inc. and Music Sales Corporation (ASCAP). All rights administered by Music Sales Corporation. International Copyright Secured. All Rights Reserved. Used by Permission.

Lawrence Brown, the Virtuoso 81 Example 4- q = 76 4 # Ao7 n ( ) G b b 7 E7 n b. A b J A b 7 G7 n G b 7 b J 6 A b w A o 7 # w After 16 measures out, Brown returns with the final eight measures of the chorus. # A o 7 G b b 7 n E7 n # b. n A b b J A b 7 G7 n n G b 7 b b n 6 J A b. ( D b A b A o 7 ) w

New Life: The Section of the 1950s 17 Example 6-4 q = 180? b b b 4 4 b. A b 7. b.. J b J J 5? b b b G7 J G b 7 J w Ÿ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~. G7 b J C7 b J b J 10? b b b J J J J b 14? b b b A b b 7 # 18? b b b # J # J time [see Chapter 4]. Woodman tried the same thing, but once he got up in front of the band, his plans would desert him and something completely different would come out of his horn. Finally, in 1957, he went to Ellington and told him that he didn t nt to play any more improvised solos. Woodman felt that he sn t doing justice to the solo spots. Ellington continued to give Woodman written solos, but no longer pushed him into playing improvised solos, at least on recording sessions. Hearing his recorded solos with Ellington some years later (he didn t listen to them at the time they were made), however, Woodman declared himself to be halfy pleased. Whatever his own reservations, Woodman made significant contributions to the Ellington band as a jazz soloist. Nonetheless, it might well be argued that Woodman s greatest musical contributions to the Ellington legacy were his exceptional section playing and his astonishing performances of written solos.

204 Example a-9 Appendix i When Chuck Connors switched from tenor to bass trombone shortly after he joined the band in 1961, Ellington and Strayhorn had a new resource at their disposal. Their use of Connors as a new color in several different settings is discussed in Chapter 7. Even tords the very end of his career Ellington s devising new ys of using the section. Shown in Example A-9 is an excerpt from Afrique, the third section of The Afro- Eurasian Eclipse from 1971. In a figure that repeats a number of times, Ellington has ingeniously used the three trombonists as a section, but given each an independent part, with an individual sound. Over an insistent tom-tom beat, the top two parts probably Malcolm Taylor on the higher part and Booty Wood on the lower are scored in plunger, close together, but rhythmically discrete, while the bass trombone closes each four-measure phrase with a powerfully played octave leap. The figure is not played exactly the same y each time. Sometimes the second part comes in a bar later, or drags its figure. Taylor?? q = 174 4 w Í w Ó Wood?? 4 open slowly. Ó ba - u Connors bass trombone? 4 Ó j. Ó One can take just about any cross-section of Ellington s writing for the full band from any period of his career and find interesting scoring for the trombone section on any of hundreds of selections.

208 Chapter III The Unique Juan Tizol Chapter IV Lawrence Brown, the Virtuoso Appendix ii Twelfth Street Rag (Example -1) is on Early Ellington: The Complete Brunswick and Vocalion Recordings of Duke Ellington, (1926-191), Decca Jazz (MCA and GRP) GRD-- 640. It is also available on Classics 605 (190-191). The original big band recording of Caravan (Example -2) is on Columbia/Legacy discs The Essence of Duke Ellington (CK 47129) and 16 Most Requested Songs (CK 57901) and the Ken Burns set (CK 61444). Example -, Battle of Swing is on the CD set put out by CBS on its Portrait Masters label, Braggin in Brass, The Immortal 198 Year (R2K 4495) and the compilation The Duke. It is also on the Smithsonian record set Duke Ellington 198, now part of the larger set mentioned above, P6 15079, and the CD An Introduction to Lawrence Brown: His Best Recordings 1929-1944, on the French Best of Jazz label, Best of Jazz 4040. Tizol s solo work on Come Sunday, from Black, Brown and Beige (Example -4 and -4A) is, of course, on the same Prestige release listed above (2PCD 4004-2), the 194 Carnegie Hall concert. The four-part Reminiscing in Tempo, which features so much of Tizol s playing with various sections is on Columbia/Legacy CK 48654. Some of Tizol s compositions can be heard in their original versions on Duke Ellington Small Groups, Volume 1 (Columbia/Legacy C2K 46995) featuring the original Caravan, Moonlight Fiesta, and Jubilesta. Other compositions for the big band include Conga Brava, Bakiff, Moon Over Cuba, and Perdido on the two Bluebird Blanton-Webster sets, (5659-2-RB and 82876 50857 2, which also include Tizol s performance on Chelsea Bridge ); A Gypsy Without a Song and Lost in Meditation are on Portrait Masters R2K 4495. A milestone in the Lawrence Brown discography s the 1996 release of An Introduction to Lawrence Brown: His Best Recordings 1929-1944, on the French Best of Jazz label, Best of Jazz 4040. It includes The Ramble, recorded with Paul Hord s Quality Serenaders, I m a Ding Dong Daddy, recorded in 190 with Louis Armstrong, and many of the solos discussed in this chapter. They include: Ducky Wucky, Slippery Horn (19), Bundle of Blues, Sophisticated Lady, There is No Greater Love, Yearning for Love (Lawrence s Concerto), and Rose of the Rio Grande. Also on this disc are several other cuts with Ellington and dates with Lionel Hampton and Rex Stert. (It should be noted that one cut from this disc, Battle of Swing, does not feature Brown at all, rather the soloist is Juan Tizol.) Selections cited in the chap-

214 Appendix III Register of Ellington s Trombonists The following trombonists are known to have played with Duke Ellington s Orchestra. In this alphabetical listing, each player is followed by the dates of his time with Ellington. Only the barest of biographical information is presented here. For the players who spent significant time with Ellington, reference is made to the chapters in the text in which they are discussed. For further biographical information, consult the various editions of Leonard Feather s Encyclopedia of Jazz, John Chilton s Who s Who in Jazz, The New Grove Encyclopedia of Jazz and other standard reference books. John Anderson. Fall 192-early 1924. See Chapter 1. Bernard Archer. Late summer 194. Spent several weeks with the band as a replacement for Juan Tizol late in the summer of 194. Shortly before, Archer had worked with Claude Hopkins and Eubie Blake. Art Baron. August 197-1975. See Chapter 8. Since leaving the Ellington band, Baron has carved out a distinguished career in New York, including work with a group known as The Duke s Men. With the Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra and other groups, he has been called upon to re-create the solos of Tricky Sam Nanton and other plunger specialists. Lou Blackburn. Early 1961-December 1961. See Chapter 7. After leaving Ellington, Blackburn worked the studio scene in Los Angeles. In 197 he formed an innovative group called Mombasa, which featured African musicians and s a mix of African and Western music. He died in Berlin, Germany, 7 June 90. Lawrence Brown. Early spring 192-January 1951, May 1960- New Year s 1970. See Chapters 4, 7 and 8. Henderson Chambers. July 1957. Chambers, an eminent veteran of many name bands during the Swing Era, subbed for Quentin Jackson sometime during the two weeks the band played at the Blue Note in Chicago in July 1957. Jimmy Cheatham. Summer 1971. Cheatham, now a prominent jazz educator, filled in for Chuck Connors for a short time in the summer of 1971.

220 Appendix iii The following chart shows the trombonists who worked in the Ellington band during Ellington s lifetime, with the dates when they began and the dates when they were replaced. The chart does not pretend to show the comings and goings completely precisely (the period of 1959-1961 is especially problematic), but it does give a good overview of the situation in the section. The dateline is not exactly to scale. Players listed in parentheses were very short term replacements who were not regular members of the band. Fall 192 Early 1924 John Anderson Charlie Irvis June 1926 Joe Tricky Sam Nanton Summer 1929 (Harry White) Juan Tizol Spring 192 Lawrence Brown Summer 194 (Bernard Archer) (Sandy Williams) Juan Tizol Lawrence Brown Spring 1944 Claude Jones November 1945 Wilbur De Paris Tricky Sam Nanton July 1946 Wilbur De Paris May or June 1947 Tyree Glenn Oct. or Nov. 1948 Quentin Jackson Wilbur De Paris Spring 1950 (Ted Kelly) Tyree Glenn