This is an eight-CD set more for
Duke Ellington fanatics than for general listeners. Originally, some of the music came out as a two-LP set (Ella and Duke at the Cote D'Azur) and a single album (
Ellington's Soul Call), but the great majority of the material was previously unreleased when this box came out in 1998. It contains all of the existing music from four concerts performed in France in 1966. Although
Ella Fitzgerald gets first billing, she is only on 28 selections and is completely absent from discs one, three, four and eight, having just three songs on disc two. The 1966
Duke Ellington Orchestra included trumpeters
Cootie Williams and
Cat Anderson, trombonist
Lawrence Brown and the remarkable reed section of
Johnny Hodges,
Russell Procope,
Jimmy Hamilton,
Paul Gonsalves and
Harry Carney; they are fortunately in fine form throughout, playing some standards but also plenty of lesser-known concert material including selections from "Such Sweet Thunder." Two of
Ellington's alumni, cornetist
Ray Nance and tenor saxophonist
Ben Webster, make notable guest appearances on the July 29 concert. The first seven discs are from four concerts, many selections are repeated, and even the verbal introductions by
Duke tend to be similar -- but
Ellington scholars will love comparing the different versions. The eighth disc has a rehearsal by the
Ellington band from July 28 as the musicians run through "The Old Circus Train Turn-Around Blues," "Blue Fuse No. 1 and 2" and "The Shepherd."
Ellington, producer
Norman Granz and some of the musicians are heard commenting along the way. All of the music (except for a final version of "The Old Circus Train") is just excerpts from the arrangements. This disc is worth listening to closely once, but it is for the multiple live performances that
Duke's fans will most want the box; pity that
Ellington received second billing! ~ Scott Yanow