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Type of bind: Audio CD
EAN num: 0724387355026
Format: Soundtrack
Label: Blue Note Records
Manufacturer: Blue Note Records
Number Of Discs: 1
Publishing house: Blue Note Records
Release Date: January 23, 2007
Sale Popularity Level: 21908
Studio: Blue Note Records
Disc 1:- Fantastic Rhythm
- Rain Check
- Lush Life
- Satin Doll
- Something to Live For
- Johnny Come Lately
- Day Dream
- Tonk
- Chelsea Bridge
- My Little Brown Book
- Valse
- Blood Count (My Flame Burns Blue)
- The Flowers Die of Love
- Lotus Blossom
- So This Is Love
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Editor's Notes and Comments:
Album Description:
Companion soundtrack to Billy Strayhorn: Lush Life, a 90-minute documentary film about the pioneering African-American composer, arranger and pianist. The film presents Strayhorn's fascinating life as it has never been told before, showcasing his talent and passions, as well as taking a hard look at his complex relationship with Duke Ellington and illuminating the issues that prevented Strayhorn from receiving the full recognition he deserved.
Billy Strayhorn: Lush Life, the soundtrack, features 15 Strayhorn compositions performed by several of today's jazz stars, including Blue Note artists Bill Charlap, Joe Lovano, and Dianne Reeves, as well as piano legend Hank Jones and special guest Elvis Costello.
Amazon.com:
From 1938, until his death in 1967, composer/arranger/pianist Billy Strayhorn was so entwined with Duke Ellington that musicologists are still trying to figure out where the former ends and the latter begins. On this companion soundtrack to the PBS documentary, pianists Bill Charlap and Hank Jones display their solo chops on the stridish 'Fantastic Rhythm' and the soulful 'Satin Doll' and reprise the great Ellington-Strayhorn four-hand piano workout, 'Tonk.' Vocalist Dianne Reeves and guitarist Russell Malone brilliantly navigate the harmonic challenges of the title track, while she and her rhythm section dance 'Something to Live For' with an Ahmad Jamal bounce. Tenor saxophonist Ben Webster would approve of Joe Lovano's quartet rendition of 'Chelsea Bridge,' featuring Jones, bassist George Mraz, and drummer Paul Motian. Lovano and Charlap anchor Elvis Costello's languid lyrics on 'My Flame Burns Blue (Blood Count),' adding another interpretive layer to the eternal artistry of this compelling and confounding musician. --Eugene Holley, Jr.
User popularity level:

Rated by buyers
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This is probably the worst jazz CD or album in my huge collection. The instrumental performances are efficient but lifeless. There is NO soul, here; just emptiness.
Elvis Costello, as per usual, sings through his nose while rattling his adenoids. The "special lyrics" written by Costello for Strayhorn's BLOOD COUNT are as vapid as the garden variety product of David Byrne. Diane Reeves sings this music like she never really studied it and lived with it. It sounds DEAD! Nothing happens with the text and she betrays NO undertanding of the music in her singing.
Of course, when I saw the PBS documentary about Strayhorn (Why is it that this was not on the AMERICAN MASTERS series, instead of INDEPENDENT LENS, when Ellington had a 2-hour documentary on American Masters???) I realized why Reeves sings so slowly and cautiously, completely draining the mercurial spirit of Strayhorn from the music and lyrics. These performances are DEADLY!!! These songs are CENTRAL to the jazz repertoire, and in the film, she is GLUED to the sheet music READING IT! The songs sounds DEAD because she didn't know them!
FIND THE DOCUMENTARY, use this disc for a very expensive kitty-litter-pan scoop!
Strayhorn would be appalled, if he heard how lacking in joy and spirit this is!!!
Rated by buyers
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I not sure how good this is. I ordered the wrong thing. I thought I was ordering the movie.
Rated by buyers
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The CD resulting from the PBS Lush Life documentary is a prize. I only wish there had been a way to include a couple of performances by Ellington-Strayhorn era people such as Johnny Hodges' Passion Flower. Most of us collectors have that, however, so it is not a great oversight.
But to hear great pianists of different generations doing Strayhorn justice (Bill Charlap and the ageless Hank Jones) is fantastic. And Diane Reeves has become the newest pretender to Ella's throne. What a great choice for the vocals. The only thing better must be having the dvd of the marvelous documentary on the life of an important and somewhat overlooked composer, Billy Strayhorn.
Rated by buyers
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A previously reviewer wrote this was worth buying for "works that have not been recorded before, such as: 'Fantastic Rhythm', 'Valse', 'The Flowers Die Of Love' and 'So This Is Love'"....
Actually, all of those compositions have been recorded previously thanks to the efforts of the Dutch Jazz Orchestra/Jerry Van Rooijen and musicologist Walter van de Leur (who was interviewed on-camera for the Strayhorn PBS documentary). The albums "So This Is Love" "Portrait of a Silk Thread" and "Something to Live For" are full of previously unrecorded Strayhorn (previous to the late 1990s), most with original big band orchestration. Some feature vocals by Marjorie Barnes (I believe that's her name). All are available as part of a 4-CD box that also includes a CD of Strayhorn arrangents of standards (i.e. "Great American Songbook" popular music).
Also worth exploring are the two studio sessions that could properly be called Strayhorn solo albums: "The Peaceful Side of Billy Strayhorn" (originally on United Artists, now on CD from one of the EMI imprints) and the post-humously released "Lush Life" CD on Red Baron records, which is a studio recording of Strayhorn's 1965 New School concert (mentioned in the documentary).This last CD features some of the rare vocal tunes by Strayhorn heard in the documentary and on the tie-in CD reviewed on this page.
It's wonderful that all of this music, new and old, is out on CD and showing off the gifts of Strayhorn. I would recommend buying the Dutch Jazz Orchestra and Strayhorn solo discs before buying the CDs that are tie-ins to David Hadju's excellent Lush Life biography and this new PBS documentary.
Rated by buyers
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The twenty-nine year partnership between Billy Strayhorn and Duke Ellington produced an unrivaled body of work. Running the gamut from popular songs and jazz compositions to orchestral suites and theatrical scores the fruits of their collaboration have a truly timeless quality and continue to inspire and intrigue musicians and audiences alike.
"Billy Strayhorn: Lush Life" is a 90-minute documentary which will debut nationally as part of PBS's Independent Lens series on Feb. 6. As one would expect, the complex relationship between these two pioneering African-American musicians and the resultant mystique will be a central theme in this very first in-depth exploration of the brilliant composer/pianist/arrangers life.
The companion soundtrack of the same name has recently released by Blue Note and it is an elegant star-studded affair. Covering some of Strayhorn's most enduring compositions, the disc also spotlights equally satisfying lesser known titles too.
It is no coincidence since Strayhorn was a pianist that the instrument is prominent throughout courtesy of Bill Charlap, Hank Jones, and Peter Martin. Charlap takes solo strolls on both the disc opening "Fantastic Rhythm" and the classical piece "Valse." Jones goes it alone on the Ellington/Strayhorn gem "Satin Doll" while he and Charlap offer up an inspired four-handed rendition of "Tonk," which was originally performed in a similar fashion by Strayhorn and Ellington.
Dianne Reeves delivers vocals on six of the fifteen tunes. Strayhorn's signature piece "Lush Life" is a stark duet with guitarist Russell Malone. "Something to Live For," "Day Dream," "My Little Brown Book" and the more obscure "The Flowers Die of Love" and "So This Is Love" all feature her accompanied by a trio.
Playing tenor exclusively, saxophonist Joe Lovano's dream quartet of Jones on piano, George Mraz on bass, and Paul Motian on drums put a masterful touch on "Rain Check," "Johnny Come Lately," "Chelsea Bridge" and "Lotus Blossom." He also teams up with Charlap to back Elvis Costello as he delivers the lyrics he penned to "Blood Count," the last composition Strayhorn composed. Re-titled here as "My Flame Burns Blue," the trio delivers a haunting, evocative performance.
Many of the performances on the disc, particularly those by Reeves are also presented visually in the film.
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