- Source: Come Sunday
"Come Sunday" is a piece by Duke Ellington, which became a jazz standard. It was written as a part of the first movement of a suite entitled Black, Brown and Beige. Ellington was engaged for a performance at Carnegie Hall on January 23, 1943, for which he wrote the entire composition (that whole concert was released in 1977 as The Carnegie Hall Concerts: January 1943). In 1958 he revised the suite and recorded it in its entirety for that year's album titled after the suite. "Come Sunday" was originally a centerpiece for alto saxophone player Johnny Hodges; the 1958 album, which contained a vocal version of the piece with new lyrics by Ellington featuring gospel singer Mahalia Jackson, greatly increased its popularity.
Notable recordings
Duke Ellington – Black, Brown and Beige (rel. 1946), recording of 1943 Carnegie Hall concert
Duke Ellington – Black, Brown and Beige (1958, with Mahalia Jackson)
Abbey Lincoln – Abbey Is Blue (1959)
Dizzy Gillespie – A Portrait of Duke Ellington (1960)
Eric Dolphy – Iron Man (rec: 1963, rel: 1968)
Jennifer Holliday – Say You Love Me (1985), Grammy Award Winner, Best Inspirational Performance, 1986
Donna McElroy – Bigger World (1990)
Dee Dee Bridgewater – Prelude to a Kiss: The Duke Ellington Album (1996)
See also
List of jazz standards
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Come Sunday (film)
- Daftar episode Running Man (2023)
- Oscar Peterson and Nelson Riddle
- Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas
- Yahari Ore no Seishun Love Come wa Machigatteiru.
- Super Bowl
- Lee Min-jung (pemeran)
- Daftar episode Game of Thrones
- Daftar grup musik di luar Indonesia (non-pop)
- Yoo Jae-suk
- Come Sunday (film)
- Come Sunday
- After Saturday comes Sunday
- Seventeen Come Sunday
- Come Sunday (album)
- Sunday
- Carlton Pearson
- Condola Rashad
- English Folk Song Suite
- Sunday Bloody Sunday
No More Posts Available.
No more pages to load.