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Backstory in Blue - Ellington at Newport '56 (Hardcover)
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Backstory in Blue - Ellington at Newport '56 (Hardcover)
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It may be that the song most baby boomers identify from July 1956
is a simple twelve-bar blues, hyped on national television by a
twenty-one-year-old Elvis Presley and his handlers. But it is a
very different song, with its elongated fourteen-bar choruses of
rhythm and dissonance, played on the night of July 7, 1956, by a
fifty-seven-year-old Duke Ellington and his big band that got
everybody on their feet and moving as one. More than fifty years
later, ""Diminuendo and Crescendo in Blue,"" recorded at the 1956
Newport Jazz Festival, still makes a profound statement about
postwar America - how we got there and where it all
went.""Backstory in Blue"" is a behind-the-scenes look at this epic
moment in American cultural history. It is the story of who and
what made Ellington's composition so compelling and how one piece
of music reflected the feelings and shaped the sensibilities of the
postwar generation. As John Fass Morton explains, it was music
expressed as much by those who performed offstage as by those who
performed on.Written from the point of view of the audience, this
unique account draws on interviews with fans and music
professionals of all kinds who were there and whose lives were
touched, and in some cases changed, by the experience. Included are
profiles of George Avakian, who recorded and produced Ellington at
Newport 1956; Paul Gonsalves, the tenor sax player responsible for
the legendary twenty-seven choruses that enabled the rebirth of
Ellington's career; and the ""Bedford Blonde,"" Elaine Anderson,
whose dance ignited both the band and the crowd.Duke Ellington once
remarked, ""I was born at Newport."" Here we learn that Newport was
much more than the turning point for Ellington's career. It was the
tipping point for a generation and a musical genre.
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