“Great”, we all know but “late” was news to me. Yes, I know he died in 1974 but I was unaware of his rep for leaving things 'til the last minute (or later)! Pete Long’s patter (worth the admit before a note is played) returned time and again to the story of Billy Strayhorn on his knees in the recording studio frantically finishing off the music even as the first track was being recorded. This because Ellington had arrived announcing, “Well, boys, I’ve got ONE!” (Completed tune, that is!)
And the tunes?
Rockin’ in Rhythm (“commissioned by the Vatican”); Take the A-Train; All Too
Soon and Bli-Blip. These were followed by an
instrumental, Mount Harissa, which the MD pointed out is something
of an outlier for Ellington with its Latin rhythms. To which educational
content he added that the title “is a location not an instruction”! This tune
gave us a taste of things to come as it saw Simon Spillett on his feet for the
first time. Then it was back to the vocals with a bang: a raucous,
raunchy Ain’t Got Nothin’ but the Blues. Sara, come north
sometime, please!? Don’t Get Around Much Anymore (“dedicated
to Rudolf Hess”!) was followed by Duke’s Place/C Jam Blues which
featured an alto sax solo from Alison Cawley - outnumbered by the chaps but
blowing for equality. Good on her!
The second half whizzed (always brilliantly) through more of the top Ellington/Ella repertoire such as I’m Beginning to See the Light, Passion Flower and Just Squeeze Me, featuring Jay Craig on baritone sax. We were then treated to one of the two compositions which kept Ellington solvent in tough times, It Don’t Mean a Thing… (The other being Sophisticated Lady). This arrangement must surely have influenced Ray Charles as the first few bars had me questioning, “Hang on, Ellington didn’t write Hit the Road Jack, did he?”. I’ve never heard the original so the gradual fade to what seemed like just Steve Pearce’s bass and an almost whispered chorus of doo-wops took me by surprise before delightful contributions from Ian Bateman, trombone, and George Hogg on trumpet turned up the volume again! Surprise and delight were the keynotes of my experience today: truly memorable!
Lost in Meditation was the calm before the storming closing number, Cottontail. As a novel (to me) full-stop to the afternoon the band then went into a Pete and Dud style rendering of Goodbyee! Brilliant! Jerry

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Andy Flaxman on lead trombone.
Nathan Bray on lead trumpet.
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