| | Duke Ellington West Coast Swing CD Duke Ellington Discography of CDs
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Personnel: Duke Ellington (piano); Duke Ellington; Hilton Jefferson, Jimmy Grissom (vocals); Russell Procope (clarinet, alto saxophone); Jimmy Hamilton (clarinet, tenor saxophone); Clark Terry Spacemen, Ray Nance, William Cat Anderson, Willie Cook (trumpet); Juan Tizol (trombone); Harry Carney (clarinet); Britt Woodman (trombone); Louie Bellson (drums); Clark Terry, Paul Gonsalves, Cat Anderson. Liner Note Author: Mitchell James. Recording information: Los Angeles, CA; Olympia, WA; Salem, OR; Yakima, WA. Duke Ellington West Coast Swing Songs West Coast Swing Review
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Purchase West Coast Swing CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | 1969 All-Star White House Tribute To Duke Ellington CD (2002)
West Coast Swing songs
$12.49 Recorded at The White House on Duke Ellington's 70th birthday, when he was awarded the Medal Of Freedom by President Richard M. Nixon. Personnel: Duke Ellington (piano); Mary Mayo, Joe Williams (vocals); Paul Desmond (alto saxophone); Gerry Mulligan (baritone saxophone); Clark Terry (trumpet, flugelhorn); Bill Berry (trumpet); Urbie Green, ...
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$12.39 Ask Joey Wright to describe the music on his new album Jalopy, and he'll tell you "cinematic quasi bluegrass jazz compositions". That description is hard to argue with. The follow up to 2003’s “Camp” Joey’s Black Hen Music debut is indeed a collection of gorgeous acoustic instrumentals that draw on bluegrass, jazz, blues and world music to create something beautifully unique yet wonderfully familiar. A warm and captivating ambience that closes your eyes as you breathe a little more deeply.Somewhere between the 150 dates a year Joey plays as the guitar/mandolin player with Sarah Harmer and the now legendary Toronto bluegrass ensemble, “Crazy Strings” and co-writing and playing songs with his Juno Award winning wife Jenny Whiteley, Joey found the time to write a plethora of music for his new album. This one, he decided, was going to be all instrumental, and he picked 12 of his favorites for the project. He also chose the material based on knowing the playing of the band he had ...
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$9.39 When is a goth band not a goth band? When they're a proto-goth band, of course. What with all the current stirring of the post-punk pyre, it was only a matter of time before a group stumbled over the embers of this now barely remembered amorphous subgenre. Swirling around the scene in their wispy long black skirts, skull t-shirts, and bone necklaces, bemoaning the death of punk, and entangled in a dreamy nihilism more beholden to Lord Byron than Johnny Rotten, the protos were an eclectic bunch, but melancholic to a man. Siouxsie & the Banshees' desolate drone was the entry point while Joy Division was the movement's obvious apotheosis, but before the Sisters of Mercy defined the goth tag for good in the '80s, myriad bands flitted around this scene. Some like Gene Loves Jezebel, the Psychedelic Furs, and the Cure, soon moved beyond its parameters, others including Bolshoi, Specimen, and the Comsat Angels were lost in its mists forever. The Prids lovingly resurrect this movement in all its gloomy glory, paying tribute to the many musical threads that ...
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