“Discographers
and historians agree that the entire instrumental suite was first
recorded December 24, 1947, two days before its Carnegie Hall
premiere.  An unsolved puzzle is why the first 'Liberian'
acetate bears a handwritten date of May 19, 1947 with the notation
that the vocal is to be overdubbed later.  It is also agreed that Al
Hibbler was recorded afterward.1
 The date of, or reason for, his overdub is reported only in
contradictory press reports in Billboard
and other publications.  The May date is not viable because
documentation exists on the band's activities that day—six
stageshows at the New York Paramount Theater and
Duke was guest soloist with the Percy Faith Orchestra on NBC's
'Carnation Contented Hour.'  Also, the procrastinating,
deadline-driven Ellington never completed any project seven months
ahead of time.
 “Duke
invited an awed 19-year-old timpanist, Elayne Jones, 1945 winner of a
Duke Ellington scholarship to the Julliard School of Music, to
December 'Liberian'
rehearsals and to play with the band at Carnegie Hall.  Witnessing
the suite being composed—or assembled—was the antithesis of her
academic education: 'Duke would write something on paper,' she
relates, 'hand it to Billy Strayhorn, or Billy would be writing
something.2
 There was this man who sat with a cigar in his mouth and a hat on
(copyist/arranger Tom Whaley), and he would orchestrate it.  Then
they would hand it out, and it was, 'Okay, guys, let's play.''
 “Reports
vary as to whether Jones played on the 'Liberian'
recording at Leiderkranz Hall [the studio recording].  In 2003,
listening intently to this recording, Jones hears herself: 'My little
contribution comes shortly after the very poignant violin solo...I
was transported back to the day of the recording, and I was able to
visualize...'
 “For
Lester Horton, the innovative West Coast choereographer who staged
'Liberian
Suite'
in 1952, Ellington verbalized his musical vision of the Republic of
Liberia:
 ''I
Like The Sunrise'
depicts the spirit of the people who left America to settle in Africa
in 18473
from the perspective of man beaten down by the mail fist of
slavery...The sunrise symbolizes hope.  If you have another day, you
have another chance.'
 “Duke
described a tribal chieftain arriving at the modern city [presumably
Monrovia], marveling at technological wonders, celebrating with his
people, romantic liaisons, merriment, achievement, brotherhood and
fulfillment, concluding, 'As a painter does not achieve effect with
pure color, I contrived to mix quantities in this orchestration as if
I were working from a palette.  The individual instruments don't mean
a thing.  The feeling of the resultant blend is much more
important.'”
1Indeed,
 you also have the original instrumental recording, without Hibbler's
 overdubbed vocal.  It is a unique document (and, more importantly
 for you all, a unique practice tool!) that allows you to hear (and
 practice with!) the Ellington orchestra exactly as heard on the full
 track but with the vocalist removed.  You may find this an effective
 way to listen more carefully to your particular instrumental part(s)
 without the distraction of the vocalist.
2Schuller
 alludes to the invisible hand of Strayhorn, as well: “By 1945,
 when Ellington was devoting more and more time to longer extended
 works, Strayhorn did most of the day-to-day arranging, as well as
 becoming increasingly involved as co-composer and orchestrator with
 the larger works (like The
 Perfume Suite and
 The Liberian Suite).”
  (Schuller, The
 Swing Era
 134).
3Even
 the chronology is not altogether accurate.  The several Liberian
 colonies (which ultimately formed the counties of the unified
 Liberian nation, much like the several British colonies along the
 Eastern seaboard ultimately formed the states of the federal United
 States) were settled in waves over a period beginning in the late
 1810's and continuing under a white supervisory government until the
 turnover of power to the Americo-Liberian blacks in 1847 under a
 constitution of their own.
Hi there --
ReplyDeleteRE: The missing three seconds from "Dance #2". That's wrong. Those three seconds are indeed missing, but from the LP-releases of "Black, Brown & Beige". The last section is "Three Dances"; there is a skip in #1 which is nt on the UK-10"-release which I have.
By the way: The Duke's very first lengthy suite-like effort was "Reminiscing In Tempo", 1935. -- "B,B&B" was his 2nd attempt to compose a longer form, 1943/44.