Jazz Icons: Ella Fitzgerald features Â"The First Lady Of SongÂ"
in two distinct performances. The fi rst is the earliest known
complete concert of Ella to be captured on fi lm. in
Belgium, this 1957 concert has her performing with jazz greats
Ray Brown, Ellis, Jo Jones and the legendary O Peterson
on classics such as Â"Lullaby Of Birdland,Â" and Â"It DonÂt Mean
A Thing (If It AinÂt Got That Swing).Â" The second show is an
in-studio performance from 1963, taped in Sweden,
featuring Ella backed by a quartet including pianist Tommy
Flanagan. Highlights include stellar versions of Â"Mack The
Â" and Â"Just One Of Those Things.Â"
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The First Lady of Song is in top form throughout Ella Fitzgerald
- Live in '57 and '63, an entry in the excellent Jazz Icons
series. Will Friedwald's detailed liner notes describe the summer
of 1957 as a "traumatic" time for the singer (including an
onstage attack by a mental patient and a brief, unhappy
marriage), but you'd never know it from the gig in Brussels,
Belgium that leads off this collection. Filmed in black & white
(both picture and audio are terrific, as is usually the case with
this series), the set begins not with a bravura swinger but with
a languid, deeply expressive "Angel Eyes." Fitzgerald's legendary
chops are on display from jump; her control of pitch and vibrato
and impeccable articulation are amazing, yet for all her scatting
and acrobatic vocal abilities, her performance is never the least
bit meretricious. And so it goes, through the finger-snapping
"Lullaby of Birdland" and the effortlessly cool "Love for Sale"
to the Basie-esque "April in Paris," the tres bluesy "Roll 'Em
Pete" (Ella's only known performance of pianist Pete Johnson's
12-bar standard), the relaxed "I Can't Give You Anything but
Love" (wherein she does affectionate, spot-on imitations of Louis
Armstrong and obscure '40s singer Rose Murphy), and Duke
Ellington's "It Don't Mean a Thing," the rousing show closer
(featuring trumpeter Roy Eldridge and the great pianist O
Peterson, who sit in with guitarist Ellis, drummer Jo Jones,
and bassist Ray Brown, Ella's regular accompanists). The second
set, again in black & white but this time on videotape, finds
Ella and an entirely different band (led by pianist Tommy
Flanagan) in a Stockholm TV studio. This one is perhaps a little
jazzier than the first; the tempos are faster and the singing a
bit throatier, and along with familiar fare like "Mack the
," there are three tunes ("Runnin' Wild," "No Moon at All,"
and Ray Charles' "Hallelujah, I Love [Him] So") that were
recorded live only on this one occasion. All in all, another
winner from one of the best live jazz series ever produced. --Sam
Graham
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Review
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"Jazz Icons is doing for jazz what the Criterion Collection has
done for classic and important films". -- Jazz Times
From the Contributor
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JAZZ ICONS(tm) is an ongoing DVD series featuring full-length
concerts and in-studio performances by the greatest legends of
jazz, filmed all over the world from the 1950s through the 1970s.
Beautifully transferred from the riginal masters, none of these
concerts has ever been officially released on home video, and in
many cases, the material was never broadcast. Each DVD is
produced with the full support and cooperation of the artists or
their estates. JAZZ ICONS(tm) comes to you from Reelin' In The
Years Productions, GRAMMY Nominated producers of the American
Folk Blues Festival DVDs 1962 - 1966.
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