Bluella: Ella Fitzgerald Sings The Blues

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Bluella: Ella Fitzgerald Sings The Blues album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 63:36

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Nice album, shame about the description

MichaelatEGKK

How can this album have been released in 1953 as the details given above say?

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Ella Swings The Blues!

GregAvakian

It's really nice to hear this collection of Ella Fitzgerald singing blues in front of a big band. Of course this isn't smokey-bar blues, but big powerful full-band blues. So: it swings like mad! I'm a big fan of jazz musicians playing Blues and the bands behind the singer are like all-star versions of all-star bands. What's especially interesting is that most of these guys have been sidemen in the great big bands of history -both earlier and later versions of these bands. So here you have the masters (the most experienced jazzmen of the day) backing the mistress (perhaps the greatest singer of all time). If you like later-day Ella Fitzgerald, you'll love this CD. As a Lindy Hop dancer, I love it!

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Icon: Ella Fitzgerald

By Will Friedwald, eMusic Contributor

"Man, woman, or child, Ella is the most!" Bing Crosby's much-quoted praise of Ella Fitzgerald is suspiciously similar to Duke Ellington's equally famous observation that Fitzgerald was "beyond category." They were both right: Fitzgerald was much greater than any other jazz singer or any other female singer; over the course of a career that lasted 60 years, she consistently transcended genre, gender and just about everything else. How amazing is it that Fitzgerald was unquestionably… more »

They Say All Music Guide

Part of a Fantasy sampler series that features musicians (and in this case a notable vocalist) performing the blues, this CD features Ella Fitzgerald on 11 performances taken from a variety of sessions. Although she never specialized in the blues, Ella had no difficulty swinging over blues changes and sometimes putting strong emotion into the lowdown variety. There is one song apiece from the 1950s and ’60s, while the remainder of the program dates from 1971-1979. Ella’s rendition of “C-Jam Blues” at the Santa Monica Civic in 1972 is a true classic, and other highlights include “Duke’s Place” (with the Duke Ellington Orchestra in 1966), “I’m Walkin’,” and the lengthy “Basella,” with Count Basie’s big band. But the material is easily available in more complete form elsewhere, making this reissue more of a sampler for casual fans. – Scott Yanow

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