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26 of 28 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Chuck Colson on Duke Ellington's Concert of Sacred Music,
By A Customer
This review is from: Concert of Sacred Music (Audio CD)
BreakPoint Commentary - April 29, 1999 A Jazz Genius - The Music of Duke Ellington By Charles W. ColsonToday marks the 100th anniversary of the birth of Duke Ellington, one of the giants of twentieth Century music. Few would contest the claim that Ellington contributed more to the development of jazz music than anyone else who ever lived. But there is one thing about him that is not widely known: His abiding Christian faith. Ellington was raised in a deeply Christian home. Every Sunday his mother took him to at least two church services, and she frequently told her son that he was blessed and that God would take care of him. The Duke never forgot those early lessons. As a young man, Ellington immersed himself in the Scriptures. A friend from Ellington's early days in Washington, D.C., recalled how the musician would often come home after a performance and read the Bible while taking a bath, and continue reading until the water turned cold. Ellington was meticulous about saying grace before meals, and he once wrote that "the greatest thing one man can do for another man is to pray for him." During his middle years Ellington was not exactly a model Christian. He was thought to be somewhat of a womanizer, and he didn't attend church regularly. But according to biographer James Lincoln Collier, "there can be no questioning the sincerity of his religious feelings." It was in 1965 that Ellington made his deep faith public. That year he was commissioned to do a liturgical composition for the inauguration of San Franscisco's Grace Cathedral. This work, the first of three sacred concerts, signaled a permanent change for Ellington. "This music," he declared, "is the most important thing I've ever done or am ever likely to do. This is personal, not career. Now I can say openly what I have been saying on my knees." The centerpiece of this concert (Duke Ellington: A Concert of Sacred Music from Grace Cathedral) is a 15-minute piece entitled "In the Beginning God." There was also an a cappella version of the Lord's Prayer, and the closing number, featuring famous tap dancer Bunny Briggs, is called "David Danced Before the Lord with All His Might." From then on Ellington saw himself as "God's messenger," and he dedicated his last years to serving God through his music, writing three sacred concerts before his death in 1974. The reception to these works was mixed. Some religious people thought jazz inappropriate for praising God. And many jazz musicians thought praising God inappropriate for Duke Ellington. When people complained that Ellington's third sacred concert was taking too long to complete, Ellington defended his meticulousness, saying "You can jive with secular music, but you can't jive with the Almighty." Ellington joins other musical giants like Bach and Mendolson as geniuses who sought to serve God through their music. Music historians rarely mention Ellington's faith but you and I ought to reclaim cultural heroes like Duke Ellington and proclaim the truth about his beliefs. Why not celebrate the Duke's birthday today by purchasing his sacred concerts. Listen to them with an unsaved friend who likes jazz. After all, God has never been praised in quite the same way . . . before or since. Copyright (c) 1999 Prison Fellowship Ministries
12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Required Ellington, regardless of spirituality.,
By
This review is from: Concert of Sacred Music (Audio CD)
This is so significant a part of Duke Ellington's life that to not own it is a sin. (Pardon the pun).In all seriousness, this is some of the most spiritual work Ellington ever composed and it shows greatly in listening. I personally am not the biggest fan of "christianified" popular music, but Duke Ellington had a certain right to do what he saw fit with "his" music. In this regard this is one of his most significant works. It begins, appropriately, with 'In the Beginning', a nice mix of spirituals with jazz, and a nice soothing vocal by Brock Peters. This is followed by an interlude containing the rather perky recitals of the books of the bible. Not my favorite component of the work, but this IS a spiritual work. Great sax and trumpet work however, by Paul Gonsalves and Cat Anderson, respectively. A reprise of the "books" theme brings the piece around again, and some great drum work here by none other than Louis Bellson is well worth noting. 'Tell me it's the Truth' features a nice swinging horn section and a happy romp through the southern sprituals with awesome vocals by Esther Marrow! BEAUTIFUL!! 'Come Sunday' was almost a given to be included in the Sacred Concerts. Esther Marrow again performs with all the feeling of Mahalia Jackson. 'The Lord's Prayer' is a strong hand on any listener's forehead, again sung by Esther Marrow. Great rhythm and swing for this emotional spiritual. 'Come Sunday' is next reprised in a nice, more subdued version, to complete it's role in the concert and lend a theme to the work in an instrumental, vocal-free way. Well worth the purchase price alone to hear yet another Johnny Hodges miracle on saxophone. PERFECT!! 'Will You Be There? Aint But THe One' is a choir-heavy challenge to the listener and a one-on-one discussion, between Jimmy McPhail and the listener, to look at our own inner spirituality. Followed by a swinging spiritual walk through Duke's world of jazz and the lord. Great stuff here. 'New World a Coming' is perhaps the most refreshing ingredient in the performance. This beautiful Ellington suite is always welcome and finds a strong position here in the Sacred Concerts. Duke plays the theme statement in an aggressively beautiful way, leading us to come to understand the work as one of upbeat hope and forwardness to all that awaits us in our future. One of Ellington's best recorded versions and quite possibly one of his best recorded piano performances ever. 'David Danced before the Lord...' features Bunny Briggs tapping away a wonderful introduction of a reprised 'Come Sunday' choired theme and a great rhythm section. Unparalleled arranging by Ellington here once again proves his mastery at his craft. If this doesnt get you to swing than nothin will. This concert is perhaps one that grows on the listener like no other. Listen to it once, its good, listen to it twice, its better, listen to it three times and you may begin to find it more beautiful than you ever imagined. Thank you Duke.
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
This music really is sacred!,
By Margaret Franklin (Brooklyn, New York) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Concert of Sacred Music (Audio CD)
As the editorial review says, what is little known abt the great man of Jazz was his tremendous abiding Christian faith and his lively and invigorating spirtuality. And by God, does it just pour out in his Sacred Concert music. I highly recommend picking up the book called Duke Ellington : A Spiritual Biography bu Janna Steed, which I bought along with this. It's a short form popular biography (like the Penguin Lives biographies) but it's main focus is on Duke's Sacred Music and concerts. Apparently this author is The expert on his Sacred Music and has been studying it and Duke's spirituality for years. Exciting stuff, along with this great CD!
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Required Ellington, Regardless of Spirituality,
By
This review is from: A Concert Of Sacred Music From Grace Cathedral, 1965 (Audio CD)
This is so significant a part of Duke Ellington's life that to not own it is a sin. (Pardon the pun).In all seriousness, this is some of the most spiritual work Ellington ever composed and it shows greatly in listening. I personally am not the biggest fan of "christianified" popular music, but Duke Ellington had a certain right to do what he saw fit with "his" music. In this regard this is one of his most significant works. It begins, appropriately, with 'In the Beginning', a nice mix of spirituals with jazz, and a nice soothing vocal by Brock Peters. This is followed by an interlude containing the rather perky recitals of the books of the bible. Not my favorite component of the work, but this IS a spiritual work. Great sax and trumpet work however, by Paul Gonsalves and Cat Anderson, respectively. A reprise of the "books" theme brings the piece around again, and some great drum work here by none other than Louis Bellson is well worth noting. 'Tell me it's the Truth' features a nice swinging horn section and a happy romp through the southern sprituals with awesome vocals by Esther Marrow! BEAUTIFUL!! 'Come Sunday' was almost a given to be included in the Sacred Concerts. Esther Marrow again performs with all the feeling of Mahalia Jackson. 'The Lord's Prayer' is a strong hand on any listener's forehead, again sung by Esther Marrow. Great rhythm and swing for this emotional spiritual. 'Come Sunday' is next reprised in a nice, more subdued version, to complete it's role in the concert and lend a theme to the work in an instrumental, vocal-free way. Well worth the purchase price alone to hear yet another Johnny Hodges miracle on saxophone. PERFECT!! 'Will You Be There? Aint But THe One' is a choir-heavy challenge to the listener and a one-on-one discussion, between Jimmy McPhail and the listener, to look at our own inner spirituality. Followed by a swinging spiritual walk through Duke's world of jazz and the lord. Great stuff here. 'New World a Coming' is perhaps the most refreshing ingredient in the performance. This beautiful Ellington suite is always welcome and finds a strong position here in the Sacred Concerts. Duke plays the theme statement in an aggressively beautiful way, leading us to come to understand the work as one of upbeat hope and forwardness to all that awaits us in our future. One of Ellington's best recorded versions and quite possibly one of his best recorded piano performances ever. 'David Danced before the Lord...' features Bunny Briggs tapping away a wonderful introduction of a reprised 'Come Sunday' choired theme and a great rhythm section. Unparalleled arranging by Ellington here once again proves his mastery at his craft. If this doesnt get you to swing than nothin will. This edition has been remastered from the original recordings and features a bonus track in "The Lord's PrayerII". This concert is perhaps one that grows on the listener like no other. Listen to it once, its good, listen to it twice, its better, listen to it three times and you may begin to find it more beautiful than you ever imagined. Thank you Duke.
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
How long, oh Lord?,
By Samuel Chell (Kenosha,, WI United States) - See all my reviews (TOP 100 REVIEWER) (HALL OF FAME REVIEWER) (REAL NAME)
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Concert of Sacred Music (Audio CD)
Not up to the level of Ellington's 2nd Sacred Music Concert (which also benefits from the addition of Swedish soprano Alice Babs), this recording of the 1st Sacred Music Concert may be the best that's currently available on CD. At least it's by Ellington's own band and the "tonal personalities" for whom Duke wrote the work.Besides the 2nd Sacred Concert, Ellington had made progress on a 3rd before his death. We can only hope that some American recording company assembles the best of all three and releases them in the format they deserve. Ellington's sacred music concerts--as well as the nature of his religious faith--is poorly understood, even by sympathetic critics and staunch supporters. But it is highly worthy Ellington, representative of his inimitable genius. Without it, his ouevre and life (which in itself is a work of art) is incomplete.
6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
delightful , and atypically Ellington,
By A Customer
This review is from: A Concert Of Sacred Music From Grace Cathedral, 1965 (Audio CD)
This is a re-master of the 1960's concert, and much is Ellington's music plus various speaking choirs and solos, but the mood, and the expertise is pure Ellington. His one solo is worth the whole price by itself! Simply delightful.
5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Beware,
By D. Allen "Mr. Mojorisin" (North Texas) - See all my reviews
This review is from: A Concert Of Sacred Music From Grace Cathedral, 1965 (Audio CD)
I had this on my wish list, and my folks ordered it for me for Christmas from the list and had it shipped directly to me. It arrived in an Amazon box with several other CD's. I noticed it had a homemade looking label on the disc itself, but I figured it must be a small operation that manufactured it since I'd never heard of the "Status" label. I only listened to the first few songs before putting it away for later. Well, I just pulled it back out and listened to it, and after the first few songs, it gradually began to degrade until it got to the point that it finally started skipping near the end of the disc. On closer examination it's obvious that this is a CD-R, not a CD. I've ordered a lot of CD's from Amazon, and this is the first time anything like this has happened. It might be expected that it could occur from a private seller - but Amazon?
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Dancing before the Lord,
By Matthew Watters (Vietnam) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Concert of Sacred Music (Audio CD)
As a non-believer, I am always surprised at what sort of things hint at the spiritual to me. The Utah canyonlands. Dancers festooned with feathers and colors spiralling into an arena to a tribal drumbeat at a North American Indian pow wow. My first wife was Mexican-American, and the closest I ever got to God in a Christian setting was attending a Spanish-language mass at a Catholic church in California in which the music wasn't provided by a choir but by a little Tex-Mex combo with a cheesy Farfisa organ. The mixture of the mysterious and divine with the cheerful rhythms of the Norteno music somehow put me in a more spiritual frame of mind.
That goes a long way towards what Duke Ellington achieved with this very special programme of 'sacred' music. Far from being profane, the mixture of jazz rhythms and textures and the feeling of the blues with gospel choral passages and accompaniment, all done in the inimitable Ellington style, fills the soul no matter what your religious orientation. As a live recording of a programmed concert, this has a lot of odd filler, including a Louie Bellson drum solo and a very kitschy piece in which a very white-sounding choir recites the names of all the books of the Bible. But it is filled with so much passion and pure joy, and so much of that Ellington tonal magic, much of this will stand beside Ellington's best work. The opener, in which a baritone sax emerges from the swirling musical void as the voice of God creating the heavens and the earth, segueing into a lovely Brock Peters vocal, is pure magic. But I particularly love the chutzpah of "David Danced Before the Lord", a piece the Duke wrote around the rhythms of tap dancer Bunny Briggs. It's so swinging and syncopated and just darn catchy. It somehow also gets the feeling of David's little guy triumphalism better than any sermon ever would. Ellington is testifying, and I get tingles every time I hear it. |
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Concert of Sacred Music by Duke Ellington (Audio CD - 1998)
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