“Early Ellington records are like vintage cars. They are not as he or anyone else would make them nowadays, but historically they are still important and aesthetically they are still delightful.”
Let's not confine Philip
Larkin’s conclusion exclusively to Duke Ellington’s
early recordings or even to jazz in general. Good work remains good even when
long out of fashion, and mature taste is broad and elastic. Some of us still enjoy reading Walter Savage Landor and
listening to Debussy. Imagine being able to appreciate only books composed in
the last decade, a fate that skirts illiteracy. Now listen to Ellington’s 1928 recording
of “The Blues With a Feeling,” featuring Johnny Hodges, and I challenge you not enjoy it or
insist it’s merely a museum piece. Then try “Clarinet Lament” (1936), with what
Larkin describes as “[Barney] Bigard’s perfect Basin Street chorus.” The poet
writes:
“No one
wants [Ellington] to repeat the past. No one, equally, would ever want to lose
sight of such of it as this set represents.”
Larkin’s
review of The Ellington Era, 1927-1940,
Vol. 1 was published in the Daily
Telegraph on December 14, 1963. Edward Kennedy “Duke” Ellington was born in
Washington, D.C. on this date, April 29, in 1899, one week after Vladimir
Nabokov in St. Petersburg, Russia. A memorable month for American culture.
[Larkin’s Daily Telegraph reviews are collected in
All What Jazz: A Record Diary 1961-1971
(1970; rev. 1985).]
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