excerpt from 'Duke Ellington: Music is my Mistress' pp. 219-220 (179 words)

excerpt from 'Duke Ellington: Music is my Mistress' pp. 219-220 (179 words)

part of

Duke Ellington: Music is my Mistress

original language

urn:iso:std:iso:639:ed-3:eng

in pages

219-220

type

text excerpt

encoded value

Kay Davis was an honor student of Northwestern University, where she studied opera and majored in music. She had perfect pitch, could sight-read, and had all the gifts, so we decided to use her voice as an instrument. This was in addition to her interpretations of regular songs with words, and it proved very successful on several numbers. I shall never forget her first Carnegie Hall appearance in January 1946. Subtitled "A Blue Fog You Can Almost See Through," "Transbluency" was a last-minute kind of composition, and the two featured musicians (Jimmy Hamilton on clarinet and Lawrence Brown on trombone) had to have music stands at the mike, because it had been completed too late for them to memorize. So we put Kay's part on a music stand at the mike, just like those of the musicians, and the performance was a smash. She came with me and Ray Nance when we played at the London Palladium and toured Europe in 1948. Her wordless vocals reminded a lot of our older fans of the early records we made with Adelaide Hall.

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excerpt from 'Duke Ellington: Music is my Mistress' pp. 219-220 (179 words)

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