Product Details
The OKeh Ellington

The OKeh Ellington
Duke Ellington

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Average customer review:

Track Listing

Disc 1:

  1. East St. Louis Toodle-Oo
  2. Hop Head
  3. Down in Our Alley Blues
  4. What Can a Poor Fellow Do?
  5. Black and Tan Fantasy
  6. Chicago Stomp Down
  7. Sweet Mama (Papa's Getting Mad)
  8. Stack O' Lee Blues
  9. Bugle Call Rag
  10. Take It Easy
  11. Jubilee Stomp
  12. Harlem Twist [East St. Louis Toodle-Oo]
  13. Diga Diga Doo
  14. Doin' the New Low Down
  15. Black Beauty
  16. Swampy River
  17. Mooche
  18. Move Over
  19. Hot and Bothered
  20. Blues With a Feeling
  21. Goin' to Town
  22. Misty Mornin'
  23. I Must Have That Man!
  24. Freeze and Melt
  25. Mississippi Moan

Disc 2:

  1. That Rhythm Man
  2. Beggar's Blues
  3. Saturday Night Function
  4. Jungle Jamboree
  5. Snake Hip Dance
  6. Lazy Duke
  7. Blues of the Vagabond
  8. Syncopated Shuffle
  9. Mooche
  10. Ragamuffin Romeo
  11. East St. Louis Toodle-Oo
  12. Sweet Mama
  13. Hot and Bothered
  14. Double Check Stomp
  15. Black and Tan Fantasy
  16. Big House Blues
  17. Rocky Mountain Blues
  18. Ring Dem Bells
  19. Three Little Words
  20. Old Man Blues
  21. Sweet Chariot
  22. Mood Indigo
  23. I Can't Realize You Love Me
  24. I'm So in Love With You
  25. Rockin' in Rhythm

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #156697 in Music
  • Brand: Sony
  • Released on: 1991-03-26
  • Number of discs: 2
  • Dimensions: .39 pounds

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com essential recording
Digesting the music of Duke Ellington's revolutionary "jungle" period is a complicated pursuit because he recorded multiple arrangements for a number of labels between 1927 and 1932. Sony owns his OKeh and Columbia cuts (found on these two CDs), BMG owns his Victor sides, and Decca owns his Brunswick and Vocalion work (issued on the three-CD Early Ellington). All of them contain readings of standout compositions like "Black and Tan Fantasy," "East St. Louis Toodle-oo," "Black Beauty," "The Mooche," "Mood Indigo," and "Rockin' in Rhythm." The OKeh package lacks versions of "Solitude" and "Creole Love Call," but offers some noteworthy exclusives: superb solo stride-piano versions of "Black Beauty" and "Swampy River"; Jabbo Smith's wonderful trumpet solo on a 1927 version of "Black and Tan Fantasy" as a game-day replacement for "indisposed" co-composer Bubber Miley; and the first recording of "The Mooche," with Miley in control and guitarist Lonnie Johnson augmenting an already formidable lineup that includes Tricky Sam Nanton, Barney Bigard, Harry Carney, and Johnny Hodges. Even when a star like trumpet-growl pioneer Miley moved on, Cootie Williams would more than fill the gap. Musically, Ellington brought jazz to new levels of sophistication, complexity, and emotional depth during this first great period, synthesizing the classic New Orleans sound with a vibrant theatrical element and a dynamic rhythmic impulse. --Marc Greilsamer


Customer Reviews

Fabulous music-wretched engineering2
Unfortunately, Sony engineers Tim Geelan and Larry Keyes take the old school approach to 78s, and amputate the treble along with the noise in these reissues. Once you've heard what really is stored on old 78s---e.g. in Steven Lasker's superb digital restorations on "The Best of the Duke Ellington Centennial Edition (RCA Victor)"---sound as on "The Okeh Ellingon" is intolerable. One can only hope that these fabulous Ellington tracks get reissued again with different engineers. To hear just how good 78 sound can be, check out "Bessie Smith: 1925-1933 (Hermes)", and "The Very Best of Ella Mae Morse".

Great music, but I hate this sound.2
This 2Cd contains some great performances of this absolutely best orchestra ever. I love first version of The Mooche with Baby Cox and Hot & Bothered too. Harlem twist not first but one of the best versions of East St. Louis Toodle-oo. Great version of Mood Indigo and Black and Tan fantasy without Bubber Miley.
And first version of great Rockin'in Rhythm.
This is a essential music for every fans of early jazz.
But!!! sound on this double cd is one of the worst I ever heard.
Absolutely muted, no clarity, no high tones, no drums.
I recorded some songs (Rockin'in Rhythm, The Mooche, Harlem Twist) in Austrian radio station and sound on my cassette is 100% better than on this 2Cd.
I hope then this recordings in future will be release in better form than on this Cd.

Atrocious Noise Reduction Job1
I'm appalled this CD is still in print using the same horrid transfers Sony made in 1991. The major label philosophy at that time was, "Eliminate any and all trace of hiss or crackle from the original 78, no matter if it totally kills the music in the process." Great progress has been made since that time in the development of technology to transfer 78s without destroying the music, but has Sony bothered to create a new remaster? No. They are still pressing new CDs from the original 1991 transfers and they sound HORRID. Save your money, I beg of you, and wait for somebody to do this material correctly. This release is a disgrace.