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  • Home >> Johnny Hodges >> Moon Germs


    Johnny Hodges

    Billy Strayhorn and The Orchestra

    Johnny Hodges, Alto Sax
    Cat Anderson, Trumpet
    Shorty Baker, Trumpet
    Bill Berry, Trumpet
    Howard McGhee, Trumpet
    Ed Mullens, Trumpet
    Lawrence Brown, Trombone
    Quentin Jackson, Trombone
    Chuck Connors, Bass Trombone
    Russell Procope, Clarinet, Alto Sax
    Jimmy Hamilton, Clarinet, Tenor Sax
    Paul Gonsalves, Tenor Sax
    Harry Carney, Bass Sax, Bass Clarinet
    Jimmy Jones, Piano
    Aaron Bell, Bass
    Sam Woodyard, Drums

    Arranged and Conducted by Billy Strayhorn
    Produced by Creed Taylor

    Recorded at Van Gelder Studios
    Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey
    Rudy Van Gelder, Engineer
    Recorded December 1961

    Catalog Number: 557 543-2
    Format: CD
    Release Date: March 23, 1999
    Label: Verve




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    Click on tracks to hear sound samples.

    1. Don't Get Around Much Anymore (3:00)
    2. I Got It Bad (And It Ain't Good) (3:35)
    3. Gal From Joe's (2:27)
    4. Your Love Has Faded (3:00)
    5. I'm Just A Lucky So-and-So (3:20)
    6
    . Jeep's Blues (3:18)
    7. Day Dream (3:56)
    8. Juice A-Plenty (3:18)
    9. Azure (2:33)
    10. Talior Made (3:35)
    11. Star Dust (4:25)
     

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  • Duke Ellington's Eulogy for Billy Strayhorn
    Poor little Swee’ Pea, Billy Strayhorn, William Thomas Strayhorn, the biggest human being who ever lived, a man of great courage, the most majestic artistic stature, a highly skilled musician whose impeccable taste commanded the respect of all musicians and the admiration of all listeners.

    His audiences at home and abroad marveled at the grandeur of his talent and the mantel of tonal supremacy that he wore only with grace. He was a beautiful human being, adored by a wide range of friends, rich, poor, famous and unknown. Great artists pay homage to Billy Strayhorn’s God-given ability and mastery of his craft.

    Because he had a rare sensitivity and applied himself to his gifts, Billy Strayhorn successfully married melody, words, and harmony, equating the fitting with happiness. His greatest virtue, I think, was his honesty, not only to others, but to himself. His listening-hearing self was totally intolerant of his writing-playing self when, or if, any compromise was expected, or considered expedient.

    He spoke English perfectly and French very well, but condescension did not enter into his mind. He demanded freedom of expression and lived in what we consider the most important and moral of freedoms: freedom from hate, unconditionally; freedom from self-pity (even throughout all the pain and bad news); freedom from fear of possibly doing something that might help another more than it might himself; and freedom from the kind of pride that could make a man feel he was better than his brother or neighbor.

    His patience was incomparable and unlimited. He had no aspirations to enter into any kind of competition, yet the legacy he leaves, his oeuvre, will never be less than the ultimate on the highest plateau of culture (whether by comparison or not).

    God bless Billy Strayhorn.
    – Duke Ellington

    A Rare Look at Hodges and Strayhorn without Ellington
    This disc, which is the result of a session in 1961, features Johnny Hodges on alto sax with Billy Strayhorn as the band leader. Detail of the session is related in Lush Life, the biography of Billy Strayhorn (pg. 217). Briefly, Strayhorn was given free rein in providing new arrangements of songs by Ellington, Hodges and himself. In the 30-plus years they worked together, Strayhorn used the Ellington orchestra to feature Hodges. However, this disc really puts Hodges in the forefront of the orchestra and the results are tremendous. Hodges, under Strayhorn’s direction, gives top-notch renditions of two of the great songs they did together, “Daydream” and “I Got It Bad.” I haven’t stopped playing this disc, comparing the arrangements by Strayhorn and playing by Hodges against other Ellington discs. Another one you may want to try is “And His Mother Called Him Bill,” which I think is Hodges’ greatest performance.
    – Suneeday2
    Great Ballads
    Very nice playing, especially on the ballads like “I Got It Bad,” “Your Love Has Faded” and “Day Dream.” Hodges’ solos on these tracks are achingly pretty and Strayhorn’s arrangements are elegant.
     
    – Dlarry, Arlington, Virginia



    Billy to Johnny:
    "Letter B and back to coda"



    Lawrence Brown and Johnny discuss "Gal from Joe's"


    "I'm Just a Lucky So-and-So"


    "Stardust"


    Billy, Johnny and Creed (in the booth) Checking the score "Jeep's Blues"


    Billy and Johnny

    Photos by Chuck Stewart

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