Centennial Collection: The Birthday Sessions

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

Annotation

Each CD has it's own barcode/catno:
CD 1: 018111578325 / 15 783
CD 2: 018111578424 / 15 784
CD 3: 018111578523 / 15 785
CD 4: 018111578622 / 15 786
CD 5: 018111578721 / 15 787

There is a release with the same contents, but different BOX:
https://www.discogs.com/release/6467058

Annotation last modified on 2019-06-17 20:31 UTC.

Tracklist

1CD
2CD
3CD
4CD
5CD
#TitleRatingLength
1V.I.P.’s Boogie
recording engineer:
Wally Heider (on 1954-04-29)
recorded at:
McElroy's Ballroom in Portland, Oregon, United States (on 1954-04-29)
live recording of:
V.I.P.'s Boogie (on 1954-04-29)
composer:
Duke Ellington (US composer, pianist & jazz bandleader)
2:51
2Jam With Sam
recording engineer:
Wally Heider (on 1954-04-29)
recorded at:
McElroy's Ballroom in Portland, Oregon, United States (on 1954-04-29)
live recording of:
Jam With Sam (on 1954-04-29)
composer:
Duke Ellington (US composer, pianist & jazz bandleader)
4:03
3The Bunny Hop Mambo
recording engineer:
Wally Heider (on 1954-04-29)
recorded at:
McElroy's Ballroom in Portland, Oregon, United States (on 1954-04-29)
live recording of:
Bunny Hop (on 1954-04-29)
writer:
Ray Anthony and Leonard Auletti (songwriter, best known for co-writing "The Bunny Hop")
publisher:
Moonlight Music, Inc.
3:59
4Isle of Capri
recording engineer:
Wally Heider (on 1954-04-29)
recorded at:
McElroy's Ballroom in Portland, Oregon, United States (on 1954-04-29)
live recording of:
Isle of Capri (on 1954-04-29)
lyricist:
Jimmy Kennedy (Irish songwriter)
composer:
Wilhelm Grosz (aka Hugh Williams)
publisher:
Peter Maurice Music Co. Ltd. (on 1934-07-27)
is based on:
מחנה זה עניין
3:38
5Take the “A” Train
recording engineer:
Wally Heider (on 1954-04-29)
recorded at:
McElroy's Ballroom in Portland, Oregon, United States (on 1954-04-29)
live recording of:
Take the “A” Train (version with lyrics by Sherrill) (on 1954-04-29)
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)
3:51
6Take the “A” Train (instrumental)
recording engineer:
Wally Heider (on 1954-04-29)
recorded at:
McElroy's Ballroom in Portland, Oregon, United States (on 1954-04-29)
live recording of:
Flamingo (on 1954-04-29)
lyricist:
Edmund Anderson
composer:
Ted Grouya
publisher:
Edwin H. Morris & Company (a division of MPL Communications Inc.) and Grouya Publishing Int.
3:35
7Flamingo
recording engineer:
Wally Heider (on 1954-04-29)
recorded at:
McElroy's Ballroom in Portland, Oregon, United States (on 1954-04-29)
live recording of:
Flamingo (on 1954-04-29)
lyricist:
Edmund Anderson
composer:
Ted Grouya
publisher:
Edwin H. Morris & Company (a division of MPL Communications Inc.) and Grouya Publishing Int.
2:59
8I Got It Bad, and That Ain’t Good / I’m Just a Lucky So and So
recording engineer:
Wally Heider (on 1954-04-29)
recorded at:
McElroy's Ballroom in Portland, Oregon, United States (on 1954-04-29)
live recording of:
I’m Just a Lucky So and So (on 1954-04-29)
lyricist:
Mack David (American lyricist and songwriter) (in 1945)
composer:
Duke Ellington (US composer, pianist & jazz bandleader) (in 1945)
publisher:
Paramount Music Corporation and PolyGram International (renamed Universal PolyGram International Publishing, Inc. circa 1998)
3:44
9Ballin’ the Blues
recording engineer:
Wally Heider (on 1954-04-29)
recorded at:
McElroy's Ballroom in Portland, Oregon, United States (on 1954-04-29)
live recording of:
Ballin’ the Blues (on 1954-04-29)
composer:
Duke Ellington (US composer, pianist & jazz bandleader)
publisher:
Sony/ATV Harmony
9:19
10Satin Doll
recording engineer:
Wally Heider (on 1954-04-29)
recorded at:
McElroy's Ballroom in Portland, Oregon, United States (on 1954-04-29)
live recording of:
Satin Doll (on 1954-04-29)
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)
0:53