Original Album Series (Duke Ellington)

~ Release by Duke Ellington (see all versions of this release, 2 available)

Tracklist

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1CD: Will Big Bands Ever Come Back?
#TitleArtistRatingLength
1Tuxedo Junction
recording of:
Tuxedo Junction
lyricist:
Buddy Feyne
writer:
Dash, Feyne, Hawkins and Johnson (US jazz alto saxophonist, clarinetist & arranger)
composer:
Bill Johnson (US jazz alto saxophonist, clarinetist & arranger), Julian Dash, Buddy Feyne and Erskine Hawkins
Duke Ellington & His Orchestra3:31
2Smoke Rings
recording of:
Smoke Rings
lyricist:
Ned Washington
composer:
Gene Gifford
Duke Ellington & His Orchestra2:56
3Artistry in Rhythm
recording of:
Artistry in Rhythm
composer:
Stan Kenton
publisher:
Sierra Music Publications and Robbins Music Corp. (from 1945 to present)
Duke Ellington & His Orchestra3:21
4The Waltz You Saved for Me
recording of:
The Waltz You Saved for Me
lyricist:
Gus Kahn
composer:
Emil Flindt and Wayne King
publisher:
Leo Feist, Inc.
Duke Ellington & His Orchestra2:32
5Woodchopper's Ball
recording of:
Woodchopper’s Ball
composer:
Joe Bishop and Woody Herman
part of:
The Real Book (compilation of jazz standards, volume I)
Duke Ellington & His Orchestra3:18
6Sentimental Journey
recording of:
Sentimental Journey
lyricist:
Bud Green (in 1944)
composer:
Les Brown (American big band & jazz musician) (in 1944) and Ben Homer (in 1944)
publisher:
Chappell/Morris Ltd., Holliday Publishing, Morley Music Co. Inc., Morley Music Corp., Sony Music Publishing (Japan) Inc. (song publisher, never a release label) and ヤマハミュージックEH(CM) (Yamaha Music EH(CM))
Duke Ellington & His Orchestra2:32
7When It's Sleepy Time Down SouthDuke Ellington & His Orchestra3:20
8One O'Clock Jump
recording of:
One O’Clock Jump
composer:
Count Basie (pianist) (in 1937)
publisher:
EMI Feist Catalog Inc.
Duke Ellington & His Orchestra7:21
9Goodbye
recording of:
Goodbye
lyricist and composer:
Gordon Jenkins
writer:
Benny Goodman (clarinetist and bandleader)
publisher:
Devalbo Inc, La Salle Music Publishers, Inc., LaSalle Music, MCA Music (not for release label use! this is a music publisher, ASCAP-affiliated), Peermusic (UK) Limited, Southern Music Publishing Co., Inc. ((ASCAP) tradename Peermusic), Universal Music Corp. (USA, affiliated with ASCAP) and WB Music Corp. (1929–2019)
Duke Ellington & His Orchestra3:08
10Sleep, Sleep, Sleep
Duke Ellington & His Orchestra2:49
11Rhapsody in Blue
engineer:
Fred Christie (task: original new york engineer) and Richard Mays (task: original new york engineer)
trumpet:
Cootie Williams
solo performer:
Harry Carney, Duke Ellington (US composer, pianist & jazz bandleader), Paul Gonsalves, Jimmy Hamilton (US jazz clarinettist/saxophonist, arranger, composer) and Johnny Hodges
arranger:
Duke Ellington (US composer, pianist & jazz bandleader)
instrumental recording of:
Rhapsody in Blue (standard 1942 orchestration) (on 1962-12-20)
orchestrator:
Ferde Grofé (pianist, arranger, conductor and composer) (in 1942)
composer:
George Gershwin (composer) (in 1924)
publisher:
Chappell Music Ltd., Ferde Grofé Music Publishing (New York), New World Music Co. and Warner Bros. Music (publisher; do NOT use as release label)
part of:
Classic 100: Feel Good (2024) (number: 5)
revision of:
Rhapsody in Blue (original 1924 jazz band version, less often performed)
Duke Ellington & His Orchestra4:52
12Don't Get Around Much Anymore
recording of:
Don’t Get Around Much Anymore
lyricist:
Bob Russell (US songwriter/lyricist Sidney Keith “Bob” Russell) (in 1942)
composer:
Duke Ellington (US composer, pianist & jazz bandleader) (in 1940)
publisher:
EMI Music (do not use as release label! this is a music publisher), EMI Robbins Catalog Inc. (ASCAP), Harrison Music Corp. and Sony/ATV Harmony
sub-publisher:
フジパシフィックミュージック SBK事業部 (Fujipacific Music SBK Department) and ヤマハミュージックエンタテインメントホールディングス (Yamaha Music Entertainment Holdings, Inc., holding company – do not use as release label)
version of:
Never No Lament
Duke Ellington & His Orchestra2:35
2CD: Jazz Violin Sessions
#TitleArtistRatingLength
1Take the "A" Train
recording of:
Take the “A” Train (version with lyrics by Sherrill)
lyricist:
Joya Sherrill (in 1944)
composer:
Billy Strayhorn (in 1939)
publisher:
Music Sales Corporation (American copyright holder in both popular and classical music)
version of:
Take the “A” Train (original instrumental version)
Duke Ellington & His Orchestra4:23
2In a Sentimental Mood
recording of:
In a Sentimental Mood
lyricist:
Manny Kurtz and Irving Mills
composer:
Duke Ellington (US composer, pianist & jazz bandleader) (in 1935)
publisher:
American Academy of Music, Inc., Famous Music Corporation (renamed since 2007‐05 as Sony/ATV Harmony/Melody), J. R. Lafleur & Son Ltd., Lafleur Music Ltd., Mills Music and Sony/ATV Harmony
Duke Ellington & His Orchestra3:48
3Don't Get Around Much Anymore
recording of:
Don’t Get Around Much Anymore
lyricist:
Bob Russell (US songwriter/lyricist Sidney Keith “Bob” Russell) (in 1942)
composer:
Duke Ellington (US composer, pianist & jazz bandleader) (in 1940)
publisher:
EMI Music (do not use as release label! this is a music publisher), EMI Robbins Catalog Inc. (ASCAP), Harrison Music Corp. and Sony/ATV Harmony
sub-publisher:
フジパシフィックミュージック SBK事業部 (Fujipacific Music SBK Department) and ヤマハミュージックエンタテインメントホールディングス (Yamaha Music Entertainment Holdings, Inc., holding company – do not use as release label)
version of:
Never No Lament
Duke Ellington & His Orchestra3:59
4Day Dream
recording of:
Day Dream
lyricist:
John Latouche (in 1941)
composer:
Duke Ellington (US composer, pianist & jazz bandleader) (in 1941) and Billy Strayhorn (in 1941)
Duke Ellington & His Orchestra3:11
5Cotton Tail
recording of:
Cotton Tail
lyricist and composer:
Duke Ellington (US composer, pianist & jazz bandleader)
Duke Ellington & His Orchestra4:39
6Pretty Little OneDuke Ellington & His Orchestra4:26
7Tricky's Licks
Duke Ellington & His Orchestra3:18
8Blues in C
Duke Ellington & His Orchestra3:55
9String Along With StringsDuke Ellington & His Orchestra6:26
10Limbo Jazz
recording of:
Limbo Jazz (with Rolf Wilkinson lyrics)
lyricist:
Rolf Wilkinson
composer:
Duke Ellington (US composer, pianist & jazz bandleader)
version of:
Limbo Jazz
Duke Ellington & His Orchestra5:26
11The Feeling of Jazz
recording of:
The Feeling of Jazz
composer:
Duke Ellington (US composer, pianist & jazz bandleader), George T. Simon (US jazz writer, critic & drummer) and Bobby Troup
Duke Ellington & His Orchestra3:23
3CD: Mary Poppins
#TitleArtistRatingLength
1A Spoonful of Sugar
alto saxophone:
Johnny Hodges (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
alto saxophone and clarinet:
Russell Procope (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
baritone saxophone:
Harry Carney (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
bass trombone:
Chuck Connors (trombonist) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
clarinet and tenor saxophone:
Jimmy Hamilton (US jazz clarinettist/saxophonist, arranger, composer) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
drums (drum set):
Sam Woodyard (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
piano:
Duke Ellington (US composer, pianist & jazz bandleader) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
tenor saxophone:
Paul Gonsalves (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09) and Eddie Johnson (1940s tenor saxophonist) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
trombone:
Lawrence Brown (jazz trombonist) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09) and Buster Cooper (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
trumpet:
William “Cat” Anderson (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09), Herbie Jones (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09) and Cootie Williams (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
recorded at:
Universal Studios (Chicago, IL, USA) in Chicago, Illinois, United States (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
instrumental recording of:
A Spoonful of Sugar (Mary Poppins) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
lyricist and composer:
Richard M. Sherman and Robert B. Sherman (American songwriter)
publisher:
Wonderland Music Company, Inc. (a division of Disney Music Publishing) (in 1964)
part of:
Mary Poppins (stage version)
part of:
Mary Poppins (1964 film version)
Duke Ellington & His Orchestra3:13
2Chim Chim Cheree
alto saxophone:
Johnny Hodges (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
alto saxophone and clarinet:
Russell Procope (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
baritone saxophone:
Harry Carney (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
bass trombone:
Chuck Connors (trombonist) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
clarinet and tenor saxophone:
Jimmy Hamilton (US jazz clarinettist/saxophonist, arranger, composer) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
drums (drum set):
Sam Woodyard (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
piano:
Duke Ellington (US composer, pianist & jazz bandleader) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
tenor saxophone:
Paul Gonsalves (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09) and Eddie Johnson (1940s tenor saxophonist) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
trombone:
Lawrence Brown (jazz trombonist) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09) and Buster Cooper (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
trumpet:
William “Cat” Anderson (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09), Herbie Jones (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09) and Cootie Williams (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
recorded at:
Universal Studios (Chicago, IL, USA) in Chicago, Illinois, United States (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
instrumental recording of:
Chim Chim Cher-ee (Mary Poppins) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
lyricist and composer:
Richard M. Sherman and Robert B. Sherman (American songwriter)
publisher:
Campbell Connelly & Co. Ltd., The Walt Disney Co. and Wonderland Music Company, Inc. (a division of Disney Music Publishing) (in 1964)
part of:
The 37th Academy Award for Best Original Song (number: 1) and Academy Award for Best Original Song (number: 1964 winner)
part of:
Mary Poppins (stage version)
part of:
Mary Poppins (1964 film version)
Duke Ellington & His Orchestra2:52
3Feed the Birds
alto saxophone:
Johnny Hodges (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
alto saxophone and clarinet:
Russell Procope (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
baritone saxophone:
Harry Carney (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
bass trombone:
Chuck Connors (trombonist) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
clarinet and tenor saxophone:
Jimmy Hamilton (US jazz clarinettist/saxophonist, arranger, composer) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
drums (drum set):
Sam Woodyard (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
piano:
Duke Ellington (US composer, pianist & jazz bandleader) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
tenor saxophone:
Paul Gonsalves (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09) and Eddie Johnson (1940s tenor saxophonist) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
trombone:
Lawrence Brown (jazz trombonist) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09) and Buster Cooper (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
trumpet:
William “Cat” Anderson (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09), Herbie Jones (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09) and Cootie Williams (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
recorded at:
Universal Studios (Chicago, IL, USA) in Chicago, Illinois, United States (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
instrumental recording of:
Feed the Birds (Tuppence a Bag) (Mary Poppins) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
lyricist and composer:
Richard M. Sherman and Robert B. Sherman (American songwriter)
publisher:
Wonderland Music Company, Inc. (a division of Disney Music Publishing)
part of:
Mary Poppins (stage version)
part of:
Mary Poppins (1964 film version)
Duke Ellington & His Orchestra3:42
4Let's Go Fly a Kite
alto saxophone:
Johnny Hodges (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
alto saxophone and clarinet:
Russell Procope (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
baritone saxophone:
Harry Carney (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
bass trombone:
Chuck Connors (trombonist) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
clarinet and tenor saxophone:
Jimmy Hamilton (US jazz clarinettist/saxophonist, arranger, composer) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
drums (drum set):
Sam Woodyard (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
piano:
Duke Ellington (US composer, pianist & jazz bandleader) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
tenor saxophone:
Paul Gonsalves (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09) and Eddie Johnson (1940s tenor saxophonist) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
trombone:
Lawrence Brown (jazz trombonist) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09) and Buster Cooper (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
trumpet:
William “Cat” Anderson (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09), Herbie Jones (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09) and Cootie Williams (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
recorded at:
Universal Studios (Chicago, IL, USA) in Chicago, Illinois, United States (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
instrumental recording of:
Let’s Go Fly a Kite (Mary Poppins) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
lyricist and composer:
Richard M. Sherman and Robert B. Sherman (American songwriter)
publisher:
Wonderland Music Company, Inc. (a division of Disney Music Publishing)
part of:
Mary Poppins (stage version)
part of:
Mary Poppins (1964 film version)
Duke Ellington & His Orchestra2:31
5Stay Awake
alto saxophone:
Johnny Hodges (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
alto saxophone and clarinet:
Russell Procope (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
baritone saxophone:
Harry Carney (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
bass trombone:
Chuck Connors (trombonist) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
clarinet and tenor saxophone:
Jimmy Hamilton (US jazz clarinettist/saxophonist, arranger, composer) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
drums (drum set):
Sam Woodyard (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
piano:
Duke Ellington (US composer, pianist & jazz bandleader) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
tenor saxophone:
Paul Gonsalves (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09) and Eddie Johnson (1940s tenor saxophonist) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
trombone:
Lawrence Brown (jazz trombonist) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09) and Buster Cooper (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
trumpet:
William “Cat” Anderson (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09), Herbie Jones (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09) and Cootie Williams (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
recorded at:
Universal Studios (Chicago, IL, USA) in Chicago, Illinois, United States (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
instrumental recording of:
Stay Awake (Mary Poppins, film version only) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
lyricist and composer:
Richard M. Sherman and Robert B. Sherman (American songwriter)
part of:
Mary Poppins (1964 film version)
Duke Ellington & His Orchestra2:28
6I Love to Laugh
alto saxophone:
Johnny Hodges (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
alto saxophone and clarinet:
Russell Procope (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
baritone saxophone:
Harry Carney (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
bass trombone:
Chuck Connors (trombonist) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
clarinet and tenor saxophone:
Jimmy Hamilton (US jazz clarinettist/saxophonist, arranger, composer) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
drums (drum set):
Sam Woodyard (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
piano:
Duke Ellington (US composer, pianist & jazz bandleader) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
tenor saxophone:
Paul Gonsalves (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09) and Eddie Johnson (1940s tenor saxophonist) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
trombone:
Lawrence Brown (jazz trombonist) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09) and Buster Cooper (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
trumpet:
William “Cat” Anderson (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09), Herbie Jones (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09) and Cootie Williams (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
recorded at:
Universal Studios (Chicago, IL, USA) in Chicago, Illinois, United States (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
instrumental recording of:
I Love to Laugh (Mary Poppins, film version only) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
lyricist and composer:
Richard M. Sherman and Robert B. Sherman (American songwriter)
part of:
Mary Poppins (1964 film version)
Duke Ellington & His Orchestra2:30
7Jolly Holiday
alto saxophone:
Johnny Hodges (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
alto saxophone and clarinet:
Russell Procope (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
baritone saxophone:
Harry Carney (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
bass trombone:
Chuck Connors (trombonist) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
clarinet and tenor saxophone:
Jimmy Hamilton (US jazz clarinettist/saxophonist, arranger, composer) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
drums (drum set):
Sam Woodyard (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
piano:
Duke Ellington (US composer, pianist & jazz bandleader) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
tenor saxophone:
Paul Gonsalves (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09) and Eddie Johnson (1940s tenor saxophonist) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
trombone:
Lawrence Brown (jazz trombonist) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09) and Buster Cooper (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
trumpet:
William “Cat” Anderson (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09), Herbie Jones (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09) and Cootie Williams (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
recorded at:
Universal Studios (Chicago, IL, USA) in Chicago, Illinois, United States (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
instrumental recording of:
Jolly Holiday (Mary Poppins) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
lyricist and composer:
Richard M. Sherman and Robert B. Sherman (American songwriter)
publisher:
Wonderland Music Company, Inc. (a division of Disney Music Publishing) (in 1964)
part of:
Mary Poppins (stage version)
part of:
Mary Poppins (1964 film version)
Duke Ellington & His Orchestra3:05
8Sister Suffragette
alto saxophone:
Johnny Hodges (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
alto saxophone and clarinet:
Russell Procope (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
baritone saxophone:
Harry Carney (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
bass trombone:
Chuck Connors (trombonist) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
clarinet and tenor saxophone:
Jimmy Hamilton (US jazz clarinettist/saxophonist, arranger, composer) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
drums (drum set):
Sam Woodyard (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
piano:
Duke Ellington (US composer, pianist & jazz bandleader) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
tenor saxophone:
Paul Gonsalves (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09) and Eddie Johnson (1940s tenor saxophonist) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
trombone:
Lawrence Brown (jazz trombonist) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09) and Buster Cooper (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
trumpet:
William “Cat” Anderson (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09), Herbie Jones (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09) and Cootie Williams (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
recorded at:
Universal Studios (Chicago, IL, USA) in Chicago, Illinois, United States (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
instrumental recording of:
Sister Suffragette (Mary Poppins, film version only) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
lyricist and composer:
Richard M. Sherman and Robert B. Sherman (American songwriter)
part of:
Mary Poppins (1964 film version)
Duke Ellington & His Orchestra3:06
9The Perfect Nanny
alto saxophone:
Johnny Hodges (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
alto saxophone and clarinet:
Russell Procope (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
baritone saxophone:
Harry Carney (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
bass trombone:
Chuck Connors (trombonist) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
clarinet and tenor saxophone:
Jimmy Hamilton (US jazz clarinettist/saxophonist, arranger, composer) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
drums (drum set):
Sam Woodyard (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
piano:
Duke Ellington (US composer, pianist & jazz bandleader) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
tenor saxophone:
Paul Gonsalves (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09) and Eddie Johnson (1940s tenor saxophonist) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
trombone:
Lawrence Brown (jazz trombonist) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09) and Buster Cooper (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
trumpet:
William “Cat” Anderson (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09), Herbie Jones (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09) and Cootie Williams (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
recorded at:
Universal Studios (Chicago, IL, USA) in Chicago, Illinois, United States (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
instrumental recording of:
The Perfect Nanny (Mary Poppins) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
lyricist and composer:
Richard M. Sherman and Robert B. Sherman (American songwriter)
part of:
Mary Poppins (stage version)
part of:
Mary Poppins (1964 film version)
Duke Ellington & His Orchestra4:10
10Step in Time
alto saxophone:
Johnny Hodges (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
alto saxophone and clarinet:
Russell Procope (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
baritone saxophone:
Harry Carney (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
bass trombone:
Chuck Connors (trombonist) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
clarinet and tenor saxophone:
Jimmy Hamilton (US jazz clarinettist/saxophonist, arranger, composer) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
drums (drum set):
Sam Woodyard (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
piano:
Duke Ellington (US composer, pianist & jazz bandleader) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
tenor saxophone:
Paul Gonsalves (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09) and Eddie Johnson (1940s tenor saxophonist) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
trombone:
Lawrence Brown (jazz trombonist) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09) and Buster Cooper (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
trumpet:
William “Cat” Anderson (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09), Herbie Jones (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09) and Cootie Williams (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
recorded at:
Universal Studios (Chicago, IL, USA) in Chicago, Illinois, United States (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
instrumental recording of:
Step in Time (Mary Poppins) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
lyricist and composer:
Richard M. Sherman and Robert B. Sherman (American songwriter)
publisher:
Wonderland Music Company, Inc. (a division of Disney Music Publishing) (in 1963)
part of:
Mary Poppins (stage version)
part of:
Mary Poppins (1964 film version)
Duke Ellington & His Orchestra2:46
11The Life I Lead
alto saxophone:
Johnny Hodges (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
alto saxophone and clarinet:
Russell Procope (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
baritone saxophone:
Harry Carney (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
bass trombone:
Chuck Connors (trombonist) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
clarinet and tenor saxophone:
Jimmy Hamilton (US jazz clarinettist/saxophonist, arranger, composer) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
drums (drum set):
Sam Woodyard (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
piano:
Duke Ellington (US composer, pianist & jazz bandleader) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
tenor saxophone:
Paul Gonsalves (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09) and Eddie Johnson (1940s tenor saxophonist) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
trombone:
Lawrence Brown (jazz trombonist) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09) and Buster Cooper (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
trumpet:
William “Cat” Anderson (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09), Herbie Jones (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09) and Cootie Williams (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
recorded at:
Universal Studios (Chicago, IL, USA) in Chicago, Illinois, United States (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
instrumental recording of:
The Life I Lead (Mary Poppins, film version only) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
lyricist and composer:
Richard M. Sherman and Robert B. Sherman (American songwriter)
part of:
Mary Poppins (1964 film version)
Duke Ellington & His Orchestra3:44
12Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious
alto saxophone:
Johnny Hodges (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
alto saxophone and clarinet:
Russell Procope (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
baritone saxophone:
Harry Carney (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
bass trombone:
Chuck Connors (trombonist) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
clarinet and tenor saxophone:
Jimmy Hamilton (US jazz clarinettist/saxophonist, arranger, composer) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
drums (drum set):
Sam Woodyard (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
piano:
Duke Ellington (US composer, pianist & jazz bandleader) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
tenor saxophone:
Paul Gonsalves (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09) and Eddie Johnson (1940s tenor saxophonist) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
trombone:
Lawrence Brown (jazz trombonist) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09) and Buster Cooper (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
trumpet:
William “Cat” Anderson (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09), Herbie Jones (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09) and Cootie Williams (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
recorded at:
Universal Studios (Chicago, IL, USA) in Chicago, Illinois, United States (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
instrumental recording of:
Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious (Mary Poppins) (from 1964-09-06 until 1964-09-09)
additional lyricist:
Anthony Drewe
lyricist and composer:
Richard M. Sherman and Robert B. Sherman (American songwriter)
publisher:
Campbell Connelly & Co. Ltd. and Wonderland Music Company, Inc. (a division of Disney Music Publishing) (in 1963)
part of:
Mary Poppins (stage version)
part of:
Mary Poppins (1964 film version)
Duke Ellington & His Orchestra2:27
4CD: Ellington '65
#TitleArtistRatingLength
1Hello, Dolly!
alto saxophone:
Johnny Hodges (on 1964-04-27)
alto saxophone and clarinet:
Russell Procope (on 1964-04-27)
bass trombone:
Chuck Connors (trombonist) (on 1964-04-27)
clarinet and tenor saxophone:
Jimmy Hamilton (US jazz clarinettist/saxophonist, arranger, composer) (on 1964-04-27)
double bass:
Major Holley (on 1964-04-27)
drums (drum set):
Sam Woodyard (on 1964-04-27)
piano:
Duke Ellington (US composer, pianist & jazz bandleader) (on 1964-04-27)
tenor saxophone:
Harry Carney (on 1964-04-27) and Paul Gonsalves (on 1964-04-27)
trombone:
Lawrence Brown (jazz trombonist) (on 1964-04-27) and Buster Cooper (on 1964-04-27)
trumpet:
William “Cat” Anderson (on 1964-04-27), Rolf Ericson (on 1964-04-27), Herbie Jones (on 1964-04-27) and Cootie Williams (on 1964-04-27)
recorded at:
Fine Recording Studios in Manhattan, New York, New York, United States (on 1964-04-27)
instrumental recording of:
Hello, Dolly! (on 1964-04-27)
lyricist and composer:
Jerry Herman
publisher:
Edwin H. Morris & Co., Inc. (a division of MPL Communications Inc.) and Jerryco Music Co.
sub-publisher:
Warner Chappel Music Belgium NV
part of:
Hello, Dolly!
Duke Ellington & His Orchestra2:06
2Call Me Irresponsible
alto saxophone:
Johnny Hodges (on 1964-04-15)
alto saxophone and clarinet:
Russell Procope (on 1964-04-15)
bass trombone:
Chuck Connors (trombonist) (on 1964-04-15)
clarinet and tenor saxophone:
Jimmy Hamilton (US jazz clarinettist/saxophonist, arranger, composer) (on 1964-04-15)
double bass:
Major Holley (on 1964-04-15)
drums (drum set):
Sam Woodyard (on 1964-04-15)
piano:
Duke Ellington (US composer, pianist & jazz bandleader) (on 1964-04-15)
tenor saxophone:
Harry Carney (on 1964-04-15) and Paul Gonsalves (on 1964-04-15)
trombone:
Lawrence Brown (jazz trombonist) (on 1964-04-15) and Buster Cooper (on 1964-04-15)
trumpet:
William “Cat” Anderson (on 1964-04-15), Rolf Ericson (on 1964-04-15), Herbie Jones (on 1964-04-15) and Cootie Williams (on 1964-04-15)
recorded at:
Fine Recording Studios in Manhattan, New York, New York, United States (on 1964-04-15)
recording of:
Call Me Irresponsible (on 1964-04-15)
lyricist:
Sammy Cahn
composer:
Jimmy Van Heusen
publisher:
Paramount Music Corporation
part of:
The 36th Academy Award for Best Original Song (number: 1) and Academy Award for Best Original Song (number: 1963 winner)
Duke Ellington & His Orchestra3:18
3Fly Me to the Moon
alto saxophone:
Johnny Hodges (on 1964-04-16)
alto saxophone and clarinet:
Russell Procope (on 1964-04-16)
bass trombone:
Chuck Connors (trombonist) (on 1964-04-16)
clarinet and tenor saxophone:
Jimmy Hamilton (US jazz clarinettist/saxophonist, arranger, composer) (on 1964-04-16)
double bass:
Major Holley (on 1964-04-16)
drums (drum set):
Sam Woodyard (on 1964-04-16)
piano:
Duke Ellington (US composer, pianist & jazz bandleader) (on 1964-04-16)
tenor saxophone:
Harry Carney (on 1964-04-16) and Paul Gonsalves (on 1964-04-16)
trombone:
Lawrence Brown (jazz trombonist) (on 1964-04-16) and Buster Cooper (on 1964-04-16)
trumpet:
William “Cat” Anderson (on 1964-04-16), Rolf Ericson (on 1964-04-16), Herbie Jones (on 1964-04-16) and Cootie Williams (on 1964-04-16)
recorded at:
Fine Recording Studios in Manhattan, New York, New York, United States (on 1964-04-16)
cover recording of:
Fly Me to the Moon (on 1964-04-16)
lyricist and composer:
Bart Howard (in 1954)
premiered by:
Kaye Ballard (in 1954)
publisher:
Almanac Music-Inc., Hampshire House Publishing Corp., Kensington Music Ltd., Palm Valley Music LLC and TRO Essex Music Ltd.
sub-publisher:
ティー・アール・オー・エセックス・ジャパン A事業部 (TRO Essex Japan, A-Division)
Duke Ellington & His Orchestra2:31
4The Peking Theme (So Little Time)
alto saxophone:
Johnny Hodges (on 1964-04-16)
alto saxophone and clarinet:
Russell Procope (on 1964-04-16)
bass trombone:
Chuck Connors (trombonist) (on 1964-04-16)
clarinet and tenor saxophone:
Jimmy Hamilton (US jazz clarinettist/saxophonist, arranger, composer) (on 1964-04-16)
double bass:
Major Holley (on 1964-04-16)
drums (drum set):
Sam Woodyard (on 1964-04-16)
piano:
Duke Ellington (US composer, pianist & jazz bandleader) (on 1964-04-16)
tenor saxophone:
Harry Carney (on 1964-04-16) and Paul Gonsalves (on 1964-04-16)
trombone:
Lawrence Brown (jazz trombonist) (on 1964-04-16) and Buster Cooper (on 1964-04-16)
trumpet:
William “Cat” Anderson (on 1964-04-16), Rolf Ericson (on 1964-04-16), Herbie Jones (on 1964-04-16) and Cootie Williams (on 1964-04-16)
recorded at:
Fine Recording Studios in Manhattan, New York, New York, United States (on 1964-04-16)
Duke Ellington & His Orchestra3:03
5Danke Schoen
alto saxophone:
Johnny Hodges (on 1964-04-27)
alto saxophone and clarinet:
Russell Procope (on 1964-04-27)
bass trombone:
Chuck Connors (trombonist) (on 1964-04-27)
clarinet and tenor saxophone:
Jimmy Hamilton (US jazz clarinettist/saxophonist, arranger, composer) (on 1964-04-27)
double bass:
Major Holley (on 1964-04-27)
drums (drum set):
Sam Woodyard (on 1964-04-27)
piano:
Duke Ellington (US composer, pianist & jazz bandleader) (on 1964-04-27)
tenor saxophone:
Harry Carney (on 1964-04-27) and Paul Gonsalves (on 1964-04-27)
trombone:
Lawrence Brown (jazz trombonist) (on 1964-04-27) and Buster Cooper (on 1964-04-27)
trumpet:
William “Cat” Anderson (on 1964-04-27), Rolf Ericson (on 1964-04-27), Herbie Jones (on 1964-04-27) and Cootie Williams (on 1964-04-27)
recorded at:
Fine Recording Studios in Manhattan, New York, New York, United States (on 1964-04-27)
Duke Ellington & His Orchestra2:36
6More (Theme From Mondo Cane)
alto saxophone:
Johnny Hodges (on 1964-04-16)
alto saxophone and clarinet:
Russell Procope (on 1964-04-16)
bass trombone:
Chuck Connors (trombonist) (on 1964-04-16)
clarinet and tenor saxophone:
Jimmy Hamilton (US jazz clarinettist/saxophonist, arranger, composer) (on 1964-04-16)
double bass:
Major Holley (on 1964-04-16)
drums (drum set):
Sam Woodyard (on 1964-04-16)
piano:
Duke Ellington (US composer, pianist & jazz bandleader) (on 1964-04-16)
tenor saxophone:
Harry Carney (on 1964-04-16) and Paul Gonsalves (on 1964-04-16)
trombone:
Lawrence Brown (jazz trombonist) (on 1964-04-16) and Buster Cooper (on 1964-04-16)
trumpet:
William “Cat” Anderson (on 1964-04-16), Rolf Ericson (on 1964-04-16), Herbie Jones (on 1964-04-16) and Cootie Williams (on 1964-04-16)
recorded at:
Fine Recording Studios in Manhattan, New York, New York, United States (on 1964-04-16)
Duke Ellington & His Orchestra2:55
7The Second Time Around
alto saxophone:
Johnny Hodges (on 1964-04-15)
alto saxophone and clarinet:
Russell Procope (on 1964-04-15)
bass trombone:
Chuck Connors (trombonist) (on 1964-04-15)
clarinet and tenor saxophone:
Jimmy Hamilton (US jazz clarinettist/saxophonist, arranger, composer) (on 1964-04-15)
double bass:
Major Holley (on 1964-04-15)
drums (drum set):
Sam Woodyard (on 1964-04-15)
piano:
Duke Ellington (US composer, pianist & jazz bandleader) (on 1964-04-15)
tenor saxophone:
Harry Carney (on 1964-04-15) and Paul Gonsalves (on 1964-04-15)
trombone:
Lawrence Brown (jazz trombonist) (on 1964-04-15) and Buster Cooper (on 1964-04-15)
trumpet:
William “Cat” Anderson (on 1964-04-15), Rolf Ericson (on 1964-04-15), Herbie Jones (on 1964-04-15) and Cootie Williams (on 1964-04-15)
recorded at:
Fine Recording Studios in Manhattan, New York, New York, United States (on 1964-04-15)
instrumental recording of:
The Second Time Around (on 1964-04-15)
lyricist:
Sammy Cahn
composer:
Jimmy Van Heusen
publisher:
AF Encore Fund LLC, Applause and Encore Music, EMI Miller Catalog, Inc., Miller Music (publisher), Sony Music Publishing (Japan) Inc. (song publisher, never a release label) and Twentieth Century Music Corp. (in 1960, in 1988)
part of:
The 33rd Academy Award for Best Original Song (number: 2)
Duke Ellington & His Orchestra3:43
8Never on Sunday
alto saxophone:
Johnny Hodges (on 1964-04-15)
alto saxophone and clarinet:
Russell Procope (on 1964-04-15)
bass trombone:
Chuck Connors (trombonist) (on 1964-04-15)
clarinet and tenor saxophone:
Jimmy Hamilton (US jazz clarinettist/saxophonist, arranger, composer) (on 1964-04-15)
double bass:
Major Holley (on 1964-04-15)
drums (drum set):
Sam Woodyard (on 1964-04-15)
piano:
Duke Ellington (US composer, pianist & jazz bandleader) (on 1964-04-15)
tenor saxophone:
Harry Carney (on 1964-04-15) and Paul Gonsalves (on 1964-04-15)
trombone:
Lawrence Brown (jazz trombonist) (on 1964-04-15) and Buster Cooper (on 1964-04-15)
trumpet:
William “Cat” Anderson (on 1964-04-15), Rolf Ericson (on 1964-04-15), Herbie Jones (on 1964-04-15) and Cootie Williams (on 1964-04-15)
recorded at:
Fine Recording Studios in Manhattan, New York, New York, United States (on 1964-04-15)
Duke Ellington & His Orchestra3:55
9I Left My Heart in San Francisco
alto saxophone:
Johnny Hodges (on 1964-04-27)
alto saxophone and clarinet:
Russell Procope (on 1964-04-27)
bass trombone:
Chuck Connors (trombonist) (on 1964-04-27)
clarinet and tenor saxophone:
Jimmy Hamilton (US jazz clarinettist/saxophonist, arranger, composer) (on 1964-04-27)
double bass:
Major Holley (on 1964-04-27)
drums (drum set):
Sam Woodyard (on 1964-04-27)
piano:
Duke Ellington (US composer, pianist & jazz bandleader) (on 1964-04-27)
tenor saxophone:
Harry Carney (on 1964-04-27) and Paul Gonsalves (on 1964-04-27)
trombone:
Lawrence Brown (jazz trombonist) (on 1964-04-27) and Buster Cooper (on 1964-04-27)
trumpet:
William “Cat” Anderson (on 1964-04-27), Rolf Ericson (on 1964-04-27), Herbie Jones (on 1964-04-27) and Cootie Williams (on 1964-04-27)
recorded at:
Fine Recording Studios in Manhattan, New York, New York, United States (on 1964-04-27)
instrumental recording of:
I Left My Heart in San Francisco (on 1964-04-27)
lyricist:
Douglass Cross (US songwriter)
composer:
George Cory
publisher:
Colgems-EMI Music Inc., Dash Music Co. Ltd. and EMI April Music Inc.
Duke Ellington & His Orchestra3:02
10Blowin' In the Wind
alto saxophone:
Johnny Hodges (on 1964-04-16)
alto saxophone and clarinet:
Russell Procope (on 1964-04-16)
bass trombone:
Chuck Connors (trombonist) (on 1964-04-16)
clarinet and tenor saxophone:
Jimmy Hamilton (US jazz clarinettist/saxophonist, arranger, composer) (on 1964-04-16)
double bass:
Major Holley (on 1964-04-16)
drums (drum set):
Sam Woodyard (on 1964-04-16)
piano:
Duke Ellington (US composer, pianist & jazz bandleader) (on 1964-04-16)
tenor saxophone:
Harry Carney (on 1964-04-16) and Paul Gonsalves (on 1964-04-16)
trombone:
Lawrence Brown (jazz trombonist) (on 1964-04-16) and Buster Cooper (on 1964-04-16)
trumpet:
William “Cat” Anderson (on 1964-04-16), Rolf Ericson (on 1964-04-16), Herbie Jones (on 1964-04-16) and Cootie Williams (on 1964-04-16)
recorded at:
Fine Recording Studios in Manhattan, New York, New York, United States (on 1964-04-16)
instrumental recording of:
Blowin’ in the Wind (on 1964-04-16)
lyricist and composer:
Bob Dylan (in 1962-04)
publisher:
Sony Music Publishing (worldwide except Japan, ended 1995), Sony/ATV Music Publishing (UK) Ltd., Warner Bros. Music (publisher; do NOT use as release label), Warner Bros., Inc. (not for release label use!), Warner/Chappell (Warner/Chappell Music, Inc.) (from 1962 until 1990) and Special Rider Music (from 1990 to present)
Duke Ellington & His Orchestra2:26
11Stranger on the Shore
alto saxophone:
Johnny Hodges (on 1964-04-15)
alto saxophone and clarinet:
Russell Procope (on 1964-04-15)
bass trombone:
Chuck Connors (trombonist) (on 1964-04-15)
clarinet and tenor saxophone:
Jimmy Hamilton (US jazz clarinettist/saxophonist, arranger, composer) (on 1964-04-15)
double bass:
Major Holley (on 1964-04-15)
drums (drum set):
Sam Woodyard (on 1964-04-15)
piano:
Duke Ellington (US composer, pianist & jazz bandleader) (on 1964-04-15)
tenor saxophone:
Harry Carney (on 1964-04-15) and Paul Gonsalves (on 1964-04-15)
trombone:
Lawrence Brown (jazz trombonist) (on 1964-04-15) and Buster Cooper (on 1964-04-15)
trumpet:
William “Cat” Anderson (on 1964-04-15), Rolf Ericson (on 1964-04-15), Herbie Jones (on 1964-04-15) and Cootie Williams (on 1964-04-15)
recorded at:
Fine Recording Studios in Manhattan, New York, New York, United States (on 1964-04-15)
recording of:
Stranger on the Shore (original instrumental version) (on 1964-04-15)
composer:
Acker Bilk
publisher:
EMI Music Ltd. and EMI Music Publishing Ltd. (PRS‐affiliated)
Duke Ellington & His Orchestra2:50
5CD: Ellington '66
#TitleArtistRatingLength
1Red Roses for a Blue Lady
alto saxophone:
Johnny Hodges (on 1965-01-21)
alto saxophone and clarinet:
Russell Procope (on 1965-01-21)
bass trombone:
Chuck Connors (trombonist) (on 1965-01-21)
clarinet and tenor saxophone:
Jimmy Hamilton (US jazz clarinettist/saxophonist, arranger, composer) (on 1965-01-21)
double bass:
John Lamb (bass) (on 1965-01-21)
drums (drum set):
Sam Woodyard (on 1965-01-21)
piano:
Duke Ellington (US composer, pianist & jazz bandleader) (on 1965-01-21)
tenor saxophone:
Harry Carney (on 1965-01-21) and Paul Gonsalves (on 1965-01-21)
trombone:
Lawrence Brown (jazz trombonist) (on 1965-01-21) and Buster Cooper (on 1965-01-21)
trumpet:
William “Cat” Anderson (on 1965-01-21), Herbie Jones (on 1965-01-21), Ray Nance (on 1965-01-21) and Cootie Williams (on 1965-01-21)
recorded at:
Fine Recording Studios in Manhattan, New York, New York, United States (on 1965-01-21)
instrumental recording of:
Red Roses for a Blue Lady (on 1965-01-21)
writer:
Roy C. Bennett (US songwriter) and Sid Tepper
Duke Ellington & His Orchestra3:40
2Charade
alto saxophone:
Johnny Hodges (on 1964-05-19)
alto saxophone and clarinet:
Russell Procope (on 1964-05-19)
bass trombone:
Chuck Connors (trombonist) (on 1964-05-19)
clarinet and tenor saxophone:
Jimmy Hamilton (US jazz clarinettist/saxophonist, arranger, composer) (on 1964-05-19)
double bass:
John "Peck" Morrison (Jazz bass player from the 60s) (on 1964-05-19)
drums (drum set):
Sam Woodyard (on 1964-05-19)
piano:
Duke Ellington (US composer, pianist & jazz bandleader) (on 1964-05-19)
tenor saxophone:
Harry Carney (on 1964-05-19) and Paul Gonsalves (on 1964-05-19)
trombone:
Lawrence Brown (jazz trombonist) (on 1964-05-19) and Buster Cooper (on 1964-05-19)
trumpet:
William “Cat” Anderson (on 1964-05-19), Rolf Ericson (on 1964-05-19), Herbie Jones (on 1964-05-19) and Cootie Williams (on 1964-05-19)
recorded at:
Fine Recording Studios in Manhattan, New York, New York, United States (on 1964-05-19)
instrumental recording of:
Charade (on 1964-05-19)
lyricist:
Johnny Mercer
composer:
Henry Mancini (US composer, conductor & arranger)
part of:
The 36th Academy Award for Best Original Song (number: 2)
Duke Ellington & His Orchestra2:41
3People
alto saxophone:
Johnny Hodges (on 1964-05-19)
alto saxophone and clarinet:
Russell Procope (on 1964-05-19)
bass trombone:
Chuck Connors (trombonist) (on 1964-05-19)
clarinet and tenor saxophone:
Jimmy Hamilton (US jazz clarinettist/saxophonist, arranger, composer) (on 1964-05-19)
drums (drum set):
Sam Woodyard (on 1964-05-19)
piano:
Duke Ellington (US composer, pianist & jazz bandleader) (on 1964-05-19)
tenor saxophone:
Harry Carney (on 1964-01-10) and Paul Gonsalves (on 1964-05-19)
trombone:
Lawrence Brown (jazz trombonist) (on 1964-05-19) and Buster Cooper (on 1964-05-19)
trumpet:
William “Cat” Anderson (on 1964-05-19), Rolf Ericson (on 1964-05-19), Herbie Jones (on 1964-05-19) and Cootie Williams (on 1964-05-19)
recorded at:
Fine Recording Studios in Manhattan, New York, New York, United States (on 1964-05-19)
Duke Ellington & His Orchestra3:23
4All My Loving
alto saxophone:
Johnny Hodges (on 1965-01-19)
alto saxophone and clarinet:
Russell Procope (on 1965-01-19)
bass trombone:
Chuck Connors (trombonist) (on 1965-01-19)
clarinet and tenor saxophone:
Jimmy Hamilton (US jazz clarinettist/saxophonist, arranger, composer) (on 1965-01-19)
double bass:
John Lamb (bass) (from 1965-01-19 until 1965-01-21)
drums (drum set):
Sam Woodyard (on 1965-01-19)
piano:
Duke Ellington (US composer, pianist & jazz bandleader) (from 1965-01-19 until 1965-01-21)
tenor saxophone:
Harry Carney (on 1965-01-19) and Paul Gonsalves (on 1965-01-19)
trombone:
Lawrence Brown (jazz trombonist) (on 1965-01-19) and Buster Cooper (on 1965-01-19)
trumpet:
William “Cat” Anderson (on 1965-01-19), Mercer Ellington (on 1965-01-19), Herbie Jones (on 1965-01-19), Ray Nance (on 1965-01-19) and Cootie Williams (on 1965-01-19)
recorded at:
Fine Recording Studios in Manhattan, New York, New York, United States (on 1965-01-19)
instrumental cover recording of:
All My Loving (on 1965-01-19)
writer:
John Lennon (The Beatles) (in 1953-05) and Paul McCartney (The Beatles) (in 1953-05)
publisher:
Sony/ATV Tunes LLC (ASCAP) (ended), Blackwood Music Inc. (1953-02-07–1987-12-30), Northern Songs and Sony/ATV Music Publishing LLC (1995–2020)
Duke Ellington & His Orchestra3:26
5A Beautiful Friendship
alto saxophone:
Johnny Hodges (on 1965-01-21)
alto saxophone and clarinet:
Russell Procope (on 1965-01-21)
bass trombone:
Chuck Connors (trombonist) (on 1965-01-21)
clarinet and tenor saxophone:
Jimmy Hamilton (US jazz clarinettist/saxophonist, arranger, composer) (on 1965-01-21)
double bass:
John Lamb (bass) (on 1965-01-21)
drums (drum set):
Sam Woodyard (on 1965-01-21)
piano:
Duke Ellington (US composer, pianist & jazz bandleader) (on 1965-01-21)
tenor saxophone:
Harry Carney (on 1965-01-21) and Paul Gonsalves (on 1965-01-21)
trombone:
Lawrence Brown (jazz trombonist) (on 1965-01-21) and Buster Cooper (on 1965-01-21)
trumpet:
William “Cat” Anderson (on 1965-01-21), Herbie Jones (on 1965-01-21), Ray Nance (on 1965-01-21) and Cootie Williams (on 1965-01-21)
recorded at:
Fine Recording Studios in Manhattan, New York, New York, United States (on 1965-01-21)
instrumental recording of:
A Beautiful Friendship (on 1965-01-21)
lyricist:
Stanley Styne
composer:
Donald Kahn
Duke Ellington & His Orchestra2:48
6I Want to Hold Your Hand
alto saxophone:
Johnny Hodges (on 1965-01-21)
alto saxophone and clarinet:
Russell Procope (on 1965-01-21)
bass trombone:
Chuck Connors (trombonist) (on 1965-01-21)
clarinet and tenor saxophone:
Jimmy Hamilton (US jazz clarinettist/saxophonist, arranger, composer) (on 1965-01-21)
double bass:
John Lamb (bass) (on 1965-01-21)
drums (drum set):
Sam Woodyard (on 1965-01-21)
piano:
Duke Ellington (US composer, pianist & jazz bandleader) (on 1965-01-21)
tenor saxophone:
Harry Carney (on 1965-01-21) and Paul Gonsalves (on 1965-01-21)
trombone:
Lawrence Brown (jazz trombonist) (on 1965-01-21) and Buster Cooper (on 1965-01-21)
trumpet:
William “Cat” Anderson (on 1965-01-21), Herbie Jones (on 1965-01-21), Ray Nance (on 1965-01-21) and Cootie Williams (on 1965-01-21)
recorded at:
Fine Recording Studios in Manhattan, New York, New York, United States (on 1965-01-21)
instrumental cover recording of:
I Want to Hold Your Hand (on 1965-01-21)
writer:
John Lennon (The Beatles) (in 1963-09) and Paul McCartney (The Beatles) (in 1963-09)
publisher:
Duchess Music Corporation (BMI-affiliated), Music Corporation of America, Inc. (BMI‐affiliated music publisher of MCA Records, Inc.?), Northern Songs, Songs of Universal, Inc. (BMI), Sony/ATV Music Publishing LLC (1995–2020) and Sony/ATV Tunes LLC (ASCAP)
part of:
Sailor Moon (1995 DiC dub soundtrack)
Duke Ellington & His Orchestra2:05
7Days of Wine and Roses
alto saxophone:
Johnny Hodges (on 1965-01-19)
alto saxophone and clarinet:
Russell Procope (on 1965-01-19)
bass trombone:
Chuck Connors (trombonist) (from 1965-01-19 until 1965-01-21)
clarinet and tenor saxophone:
Jimmy Hamilton (US jazz clarinettist/saxophonist, arranger, composer) (from 1965-01-19 until 1965-01-21)
double bass:
John Lamb (bass) (on 1965-01-19)
drums (drum set):
Sam Woodyard (on 1965-01-19)
piano:
Duke Ellington (US composer, pianist & jazz bandleader) (from 1965-01-19 until 1965-01-21)
tenor saxophone:
Harry Carney (on 1965-01-19) and Paul Gonsalves (on 1965-01-19)
trombone:
Lawrence Brown (jazz trombonist) (on 1965-01-19) and Buster Cooper (on 1965-01-19)
trumpet:
William “Cat” Anderson (on 1965-01-19), Mercer Ellington (on 1965-01-19), Herbie Jones (on 1965-01-19), Ray Nance (on 1965-01-19) and Cootie Williams (on 1965-01-19)
recorded at:
Fine Recording Studios in Manhattan, New York, New York, United States (on 1965-01-19)
instrumental recording of:
Days of Wine and Roses (on 1965-01-19)
lyricist:
Johnny Mercer
composer:
Henry Mancini (US composer, conductor & arranger)
publisher:
Johnny Mercer Music Publishing, Inc., M. Witmark & Sons, Warner Bros. (holding: file NO releases), Warner Bros. Music (publisher; do NOT use as release label), Warner Bros., Inc. (not for release label use!), Warner Chappell Music Ltd. (no slash; used 1988–1996) and WB Music Corp. (1929–2019)
part of:
The 35th Academy Award for Best Original Song (number: 1), Grammy Award: Song of the Year nominees (number: 1964 winner) and Academy Award for Best Original Song (number: 1962 winner)
Duke Ellington & His Orchestra3:23
8I Can't Stop Loving You
alto saxophone:
Johnny Hodges (on 1964-05-19)
alto saxophone and clarinet:
Russell Procope (on 1964-05-19)
bass trombone:
Chuck Connors (trombonist) (on 1964-05-19)
clarinet and tenor saxophone:
Jimmy Hamilton (US jazz clarinettist/saxophonist, arranger, composer) (on 1964-05-19)
double bass:
John "Peck" Morrison (Jazz bass player from the 60s) (on 1964-05-19)
drums (drum set):
Sam Woodyard (on 1964-05-19)
piano:
Duke Ellington (US composer, pianist & jazz bandleader) (on 1964-05-19)
tenor saxophone:
Harry Carney (on 1964-05-19) and Paul Gonsalves (on 1964-05-19)
trombone:
Lawrence Brown (jazz trombonist) (on 1964-05-19) and Buster Cooper (on 1964-05-19)
trumpet:
William “Cat” Anderson (on 1964-05-19), Rolf Ericson (on 1964-05-19), Herbie Jones (on 1964-05-19) and Cootie Williams (on 1964-05-19)
recorded at:
Fine Recording Studios in Manhattan, New York, New York, United States (on 1964-05-19)
instrumental recording of:
I Can’t Stop Lovin’ You (on 1964-05-19)
lyricist and composer:
Don Gibson (US songwriter and country musician)
publisher:
Acuff-Rose-Opryland Music Limited (UK), Sony/ATV Songs LLC and Acuff-Rose Publications, Inc. (BMI) (on 1958-02-07)
Duke Ellington & His Orchestra3:57
9The Good Life
alto saxophone:
Johnny Hodges (on 1964-05-19)
alto saxophone and clarinet:
Russell Procope (on 1964-05-19)
bass trombone:
Chuck Connors (trombonist) (on 1964-05-19)
clarinet and tenor saxophone:
Jimmy Hamilton (US jazz clarinettist/saxophonist, arranger, composer) (on 1964-05-19)
double bass:
John "Peck" Morrison (Jazz bass player from the 60s) (on 1964-05-19)
drums (drum set):
Sam Woodyard (on 1964-05-19)
piano:
Duke Ellington (US composer, pianist & jazz bandleader) (on 1964-05-19)
tenor saxophone:
Harry Carney (on 1964-05-19) and Paul Gonsalves (on 1964-05-19)
trombone:
Lawrence Brown (jazz trombonist) (on 1964-05-19) and Buster Cooper (on 1964-05-19)
trumpet:
William “Cat” Anderson (on 1964-05-19), Rolf Ericson (on 1964-05-19), Herbie Jones (on 1964-05-19) and Cootie Williams (on 1964-05-19)
recorded at:
Fine Recording Studios in Manhattan, New York, New York, United States (on 1964-05-19)
instrumental recording of:
The Good Life (on 1964-05-19)
lyricist:
Jack Reardon (American songwriter)
composer:
Sacha Distel (in 1962)
publisher:
Intersong USA, Inc. (publisher) and Prosadis
version of:
Marina
Duke Ellington & His Orchestra3:16
10Satin Doll
alto saxophone:
Johnny Hodges (on 1965-01-19)
alto saxophone and clarinet:
Russell Procope (on 1965-01-19)
bass trombone:
Chuck Connors (trombonist) (on 1965-01-19)
clarinet and tenor saxophone:
Jimmy Hamilton (US jazz clarinettist/saxophonist, arranger, composer) (on 1965-01-19)
double bass:
John Lamb (bass) (on 1965-01-19)
drums (drum set):
Sam Woodyard (on 1965-01-19)
piano:
Duke Ellington (US composer, pianist & jazz bandleader) (on 1965-01-19)
tenor saxophone:
Harry Carney (on 1965-01-19) and Paul Gonsalves (on 1965-01-19)
trombone:
Lawrence Brown (jazz trombonist) (on 1965-01-19) and Buster Cooper (on 1965-01-19)
trumpet:
William “Cat” Anderson (on 1965-01-19), Mercer Ellington (on 1965-01-19), Herbie Jones (on 1965-01-19), Ray Nance (on 1965-01-19) and Cootie Williams (on 1965-01-19)
recorded at:
Fine Recording Studios in Manhattan, New York, New York, United States (on 1965-01-19)
instrumental recording of:
Satin Doll (on 1965-01-19)
lyricist:
Johnny Mercer (in 1953)
additional composer:
Duke Ellington (US composer, pianist & jazz bandleader) (in 1953)
composer:
Billy Strayhorn (in 1953)
publisher:
Campbell Connelly & Co. Ltd., Duke Ellington Music, Tempo Music, Inc. (Duke Ellington’s music publishing company) and WB Music Corp. (1929–2019)
Duke Ellington & His Orchestra2:32
11Moon River
alto saxophone:
Johnny Hodges (on 1965-01-19)
alto saxophone and clarinet:
Russell Procope (on 1965-01-19)
bass trombone:
Chuck Connors (trombonist) (on 1965-01-19)
clarinet and tenor saxophone:
Jimmy Hamilton (US jazz clarinettist/saxophonist, arranger, composer) (on 1965-01-19)
double bass:
John Lamb (bass) (on 1965-01-19)
drums (drum set):
Sam Woodyard (on 1965-01-19)
piano:
Duke Ellington (US composer, pianist & jazz bandleader) (on 1965-01-19)
tenor saxophone:
Harry Carney (on 1965-01-19) and Paul Gonsalves (on 1965-01-19)
trombone:
Lawrence Brown (jazz trombonist) (on 1965-01-19) and Buster Cooper (on 1965-01-19)
trumpet:
William “Cat” Anderson (on 1965-01-19), Mercer Ellington (on 1965-01-19), Herbie Jones (on 1965-01-19), Ray Nance (on 1965-01-19) and Cootie Williams (on 1965-01-19)
recorded at:
Fine Recording Studios in Manhattan, New York, New York, United States (on 1965-01-19)
instrumental recording of:
Moon River (on 1965-01-19)
lyricist:
Johnny Mercer
composer:
Henry Mancini (US composer, conductor & arranger)
publisher:
Copyright Control (not for release label use! this is only for copyrights and publishing relationships), Famous Chappell, Famous Music Group, Sony/ATV Harmony, Famous Music Corporation (renamed since 2007‐05 as Sony/ATV Harmony/Melody) (in 1961) and Famous Music Corporation (renamed since 2007‐05 as Sony/ATV Harmony/Melody) (in 1989)
sub-publisher:
BMG Ariola Belgium (do not use this as an imprint!), BMG Unisongs Music Publishers BV, Famous Music Publishing Germany GmbH & Co. KG and ソニー・ミュージックパブリッシング A事業部 (Sony Music Publishing (Japan) Inc., A Division)
part of:
The 34th Academy Award for Best Original Song (number: 1), Grammy Award: Song of the Year nominees (number: 1962 winner) and Academy Award for Best Original Song (number: 1961 winner)
Duke Ellington & His Orchestra2:42
12Ellington '66
alto saxophone:
Johnny Hodges (on 1965-01-21)
alto saxophone and clarinet:
Russell Procope (on 1965-01-21)
bass trombone:
Chuck Connors (trombonist) (on 1965-01-21)
clarinet and tenor saxophone:
Jimmy Hamilton (US jazz clarinettist/saxophonist, arranger, composer) (on 1965-01-21)
double bass:
John Lamb (bass) (on 1965-01-21)
drums (drum set):
Sam Woodyard (on 1965-01-21)
piano:
Duke Ellington (US composer, pianist & jazz bandleader) (on 1965-01-21)
tenor saxophone:
Harry Carney (on 1965-01-21) and Paul Gonsalves (on 1965-01-21)
trombone:
Lawrence Brown (jazz trombonist) (on 1965-01-21) and Buster Cooper (on 1965-01-21)
trumpet:
William “Cat” Anderson (on 1965-01-21), Mercer Ellington (on 1965-01-21) and Herbie Jones (on 1965-01-21)
recorded at:
Fine Recording Studios in Manhattan, New York, New York, United States (on 1965-01-21)
Duke Ellington & His Orchestra2:34