Music Matters this week turns part of its attention to the Duke:
The Ellington Century. We all - well, most of us - lived through it, and are quite possibly living through it still. The title of David Schiff's new book on Duke Ellington stakes a bold but believable claim that Duke was at the centre of 20th century music, and that his influence continues today - as well as making a plea to play Duke's music live rather than rely on his recordings. Ellington is the centre of the Venn diagram of contemporary music, a jazz musician who wrote thousands of works, a composer of genius who was also one of the great improvisers. I talk to David about why it's Ellington's century, and doyen of jazz on Radio 3, Geoffrey Smith, and pianist Julian Joseph, tell me what they make of the book.
The Ellington Century. We all - well, most of us - lived through it, and are quite possibly living through it still. The title of David Schiff's new book on Duke Ellington stakes a bold but believable claim that Duke was at the centre of 20th century music, and that his influence continues today - as well as making a plea to play Duke's music live rather than rely on his recordings. Ellington is the centre of the Venn diagram of contemporary music, a jazz musician who wrote thousands of works, a composer of genius who was also one of the great improvisers. I talk to David about why it's Ellington's century, and doyen of jazz on Radio 3, Geoffrey Smith, and pianist Julian Joseph, tell me what they make of the book.
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