Authors: Terry Teachout
“Kinda Dukish,” 282, 306
King, B. B., 276
King, Martin Luther, Jr., 316–17
Koehler, Ted, 134, 206
“Ko-Ko,” 6, 172, 208–10, 212, 237, 239, 285
Kolodin, Irving, 240–41
Kongolene, 168
Kreisler, Fritz, 27
Krupa, Gene, 153, 162–63, 286
Kuller, Sid, 223–24, 225, 227, 228
La Valse
(Ravel), 212–13
Lafayette Theatre, 45
Lambert, Constant, 3–5, 16, 137, 146
Lambert, Flo, 148
Larson, Philip, 135
Latin American Suite,
320, 341
Latouche, John, 258–61
Leadbelly, 255
Lee, Peggy, 279, 303
Lees, Gene, 42
Léger, Fernand, 95–96
Levin, Mike, 9, 262, 263–64
Levitas, Willard, 296
Levy, Morris, 314n
Lewis, John, 198–99
Lieberson, Goddard, 314
Life,
261, 267
“Li’l Farina,” 54
Lim, Harry, 218
Liszt, Franz, 122
Locke, Alain, 46
Logan, Arthur, 293, 333–34, 352–53, 356–57
Logan, Marian, 356
Long, Avon, 259
Look,
199
Lorillard, Elaine, 286
Lorillard, Louis, 286
Louis, Joe, 100
Lucas, Al, 287
Lunceford, Jimmie, 12, 151, 274
“Lush Life,” 188–90, 192n, 273
Lush Life
(Hajdu), 188
Mad Hatters, 193
Madden, Otto, 73, 75, 83
Madden, Owen, 82
Man with Four Sides,
40, 178
Mandel, Johnny, 42
“Maple Leaf Rag,” 32
Marable, Fate, 202, 204
Marquand, John P., 56
Marsalis, Wynton, 185
Marshall, Wendell, 280
Martin, Dean, 315
Marx Brothers, 92
Mary Poppins
(1964), 324
Masterpieces by Ellington,
268, 273
May, Billy, 337–38
Mayes, Wendell, 302
McCormack, John, 27
McCuen, Brad, 254
McGettigan, Betty, 355, 357
McHugh, Jimmy, 79
McKay, Claude, 46
McPartland, Marian, 343
Medal of Freedom, 342, 343, 358
Meet the People,
224
Mellers, Wilfrid, 339
The
Melody Maker,
123, 133, 138, 170–71, 179
Mercer, Johnny, 280
Messiaen, Olivier, 214n
Metcalf, Louis, 69, 70
Metronome,
9, 110, 229–30
Miley, Bubber: and
Black, Brown and Beige,
5; and “Black and Tan Fantasy,” 65–66; and the Cotton Club years, 81, 83, 86–88, 90–92; and “East St. Louis Toodle-O,” 285; and The Washingtonians,
47,
49–51, 54, 61–63
Mili, Gjon, 228
Miller, Glenn, 238
Miller, Max, 135
Miller, Mitch, 279, 285
Mills, Irving: and the ASCAP boycott, 221; background, 55–59; and the Blanton-Webster band, 215; break with Ellington, 207; and Carnegie Hall shows, 5; and cartoon of Ellington,
143
; and Cotton Club jubilee, 279; and the Cotton Club years, 74, 76, 78, 79n; and
Creole Rhapsody,
120–21, 123–24; and discipline in the band, 292; and domestic tours, 142, 144; and Ellington’s extramarital affairs, 98; and film on recording process, 168–69; first connection with Ellington, 59–65; and foreign tours, 134–35, 139–40; and hiring of Brown, 129; and marketing music, 153–54; and “Mood Indigo,” 107–8; and political issues, 225; promotional efforts, 4, 15–16,
60,
98, 103–5,
143,
154,
172, 252; relationship with Ellington, 65–70, 70–72; and
Reminiscing in Tempo,
158; and salaries of musicians, 152; and songwriting credits, 113–14; and Strayhorn, 179–83, 193, 199; and Swing music, 153; and
Symphony in Black,
148; tensions with Ellington, 161–64; and
Time
profile of band, 140; on Ziegfeld shows, 94
Mills, Jack, 57
Mills Artists Inc., 4
Mills Blue Rhythm Band, 124
Mills Music Inc., 61, 108
Mingus, Charlie, 18–20, 276, 314
Minnelli, Vincente, 252
Mittler, William, 321
Modern Jazz Quartet, 286
Money Jungle,
314
Monk, Thelonious, 281–82, 282n
Monte, Fernanda de Castro,
310,
311–12, 318–20, 343, 357–58
“The Mooche,” 88n, 137, 137n, 275
Mood Ellington,
265
“Mood Indigo”: and
Black, Brown and Beige
review, 9; and the Blanton-Webster band, 207, 210, 214; and broadcast performances, 16; Copland on, 171; and Ellington’s composing style, 57, 110–16, 119; and foreign tours, 136–39; Hardwick and Whetsel’s influence, 41; and Jones, 174n; LP recordings, 268; and Monk, 281; origin of, 106–10; popularity of, 152–54; rearrangements of, 127–28; and recording sessions, 172; and “Rude Interlude,” 148–49; Schuller on, 117; and small-group releases, 162; and
Time
profile, 291; and tribute to Ellington, 359; and
Your Saturday Date with the Duke,
255
Morgen, Joe, 291, 299–300, 342
Morton, Jelly Roll, 54, 65, 85, 118, 148–49
Mostel, Zero, 259
Moten, Bennie, 206
Mulligan, Gerry, 199, 286
Murphy, Dudley, 95–96
Murphy, Elliott, 282
Murrow, Edward R., 305
Music Ho!: A Study of Music in Decline
(Lambert), 146–47
Music in a New Found Land
(Mellers), 339
Music Is My Mistress
(Ellington): on alcohol consumption, 174; on
Black, Brown and Beige,
239, 242; on
Black and Tan,
97–98; on the Blanton-Webster band, 210, 212; on Brown, 130; on Carnegie Hall show, 10; on the Cotton Club years, 75, 79, 84, 89; on
Creole Rhapsody,
120; on Duke’s Serenaders, 42; on early compositions, 33n; on Ellington’s honors and awards, 342n; on family of Ellington, 29; on foreign tours, 137, 140, 320; on Hamilton, 255; on marriage of Ellington, 40; on Miley, 63; on Mills, 60, 181; on Mingus, 19–20; on Newport Jazz Festival, 290; on
Pousse-Café,
328; on
Reminiscing in Tempo,
155; on Sinatra, 315, 337; on Strayhorn, 186–87; on Tizol, 103; on Washington, D. C., 26; on the Washingtonians, 51; on Webster, 205; on
The World of Duke Ellington,
354–55; writing of, 353–55
Musicraft label, 255, 262
Mutual Broadcasting System, 165, 247
My People
(revue), 243, 316–18, 329, 330
“The Mystery Song,” 70, 79, 137n
Nance, Ray, 217,
218,
277, 287, 315, 316, 317, 319, 341, 359
Nanton, Joseph “Tricky Sam”: and “Black and Tan Fantasy,” 66; and Blanton, 208; and the Blanton-Webster band, 212,
218
; and the Cotton Club years, 81, 83, 87, 91,
133
; death, 254, 272; on Ellington’s appetite, 166; and Ellington’s sound, 12; and “Old Man Blues,” 106; and “St. Louis Blues,” 127; and timing of gigs, 151; and Tizol, 102–3; and the Washingtonians, 61–63
National Association of Negro Musicians, 43
National Council on the Arts, 342
The
Negro Musician,
43
“Never No Lament,” 114, 209, 210, 211n,
218,
253, 265
Nevin, Ethelbert, 27
The
New Masses,
58
New Orleans jazz, 36, 44
The
New Orleans Suite,
347–48, 347–49, 351
The
New Republic,
158
New World A-Coming,
244, 329, 330
New World Symphony (Dvorˇák),
52
The
New York Age,
75, 78, 97, 104, 181
New York Amsterdam News,
68–69, 70, 100, 181, 205
“New York City Blues,” 248
New York Clipper,
49
New York Herald Tribune,
9, 331
The
New York Times:
on
Beggar’s Holiday,
261; on
Black, Brown and Beige,
6, 9, 118; on Cold War politics, 318; and
Creole Rhapsody,
124; on Ellington’s death, 358; on Ellington’s health, 357; on Palace Theatre show, 92; on
The River,
350; on
Sacred Music
concerts, 331, 333; on
Show Girl,
93; on tone poems, 246; on U Street, 24
The
New York Times Book Review,
339
The
New York Times Magazine,
326
The
New Yorker,
30, 77–78, 88, 92, 134, 155, 199, 251–52, 336, 341
Newport Jazz Festival, 286–90,
289
Nichols, Red, 85
Night Creature,
316
Nixon, Richard, 342–43, 358
Nola Rehearsal Studio, 6
Norman Petty Trio, 109
Norvo, Red, 178
Oakley, Helen, 10, 92, 100, 160, 163–64, 212, 354
Oberstein, Eli, 243, 254
Odets, Clifford, 224
O’Hara, John, 119
“Old Man Blues,” 104–6, 110–11, 119, 123, 137
Oliver, Joe “King,” 44, 49, 54, 66, 85, 88
“On the Road with Duke Ellington” (documentary), 336–37
O’Neill, Eugene, 98
Original Dixieland Jazz Band, 36, 45, 48, 135
Ottley, Roi, 244
Page, Walter, 201–2
Palace Theatre, 92
Paley, William, 89
Palomar Ballroom, 153
Panassié, Hugues, 127, 139
Parish, Mitchell, 108–9
Park, Frances, 78
Parker, Charlie, 192, 267
Parks, Gordon, 177, 194, 303–4, 358
Pass, Joe, 353
“Passion Flower,” 191–92
Pastel Period,
247
Patterson, Thomas, 297
Paul, Elliot, 232
Paul, Les, 279
“Perdido,” 102, 275
Peress, Maurice, 353
Perfume Suite,
245, 273
Person to Person,
305
Peyton, Dave, 69
Phonograph Monthly Review,
68
Pins and Needles,
224, 224n
The
Pittsburgh Courier,
69, 126
plagiarism, 62, 67
Pollock, Jackson, 267
Pons, Lily, 192
The
Popular Duke Ellington,
329
Popular Front, 225, 278
Porcino, Al, 337
Porgy and Bess
(Gershwin), 119, 156–57, 259, 319
Porter, Cole, 266, 279
Porter, Ralph, 202