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a VOA Special English General News Report.
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Text:
Duke Ellington was one of the leading jazz artists
of the 20th century. He was also a native of
Washington.
Duke Ellington brought jazz to the world. He and his
orchestra performed for millions of people. In 1969,
President Richard Nixon gave him the Presidential
Medal of Freedom. Americas recording industry
honored Ellington with 13 Grammy Awards.
Today, his granddaughter, Mercedes Ellington, is
head of the Duke Ellington Center for the Arts.
MERCEDES ELLINGTON:The music of Duke Ellington is of
such a structure that it crosses generations and it
makes, puts everybody on an even scale. Duke
Ellington used to be very charming and very
gracious, and appreciated his career to such an
extent that, when he was invited to play in
different countries especially, he would compose a
suite dedicated to that country. He loved to go
places he was not supposed to go. He never labeled
his music. It was not jazz, it was not this. It was
just, he said, it was American Music.
Duke Ellington helped to break down racial barriers
in the United States.
MERCEDES ELLINGTON:The commonality between people is
one of the things that I think that Ellington wanted
to accentuate. He was always on the path of
acknowledging what was really happening in the
world. But the ideal of people being drawn together
through music was his goal. And, he was constantly
writing. Every day, he wrote. He wrote every day,
even when he was ill, dying in a hospital. There was
music paper. He had music paper and a piano at the
foot of the bed.
Mercedes Ellington rarely saw her grandfather.
MERCEDES ELLINGTON:We never saw him really because
the orchestra was constantly on tour. The only time
that we would see them is when they came to New
York. They would play at the Apollo, they would play
the Rainbow Room. And so we had these intimate
family gatherings backstage in the dressing rooms.
As a boy, Ellington showed more interest in sports
than music. But musicians were more respected.
MERCEDES ELLINGTON:The ladies were drawn to the
piano players and the musicians. And so as his
interest in ladies increased, so did his interest in
music. So he was driven by music and by women.
Duke Ellington started playing the piano when he was
seven. By age 15, he was writing songs. Years later,
he never wanted people to know his age.
MERCEDES ELLINGTON:I think he was vain enough that
he did not want like all of his lady friends and
certainly some of his fans to know that he was old
enough to have grandchildren, so he asked me to call
him Uncle Edward.
Mercedes joined Ellingtons orchestra on a trip to
Russia in the 1970s.
MERCEDES ELLINGTON:The people were running on the
tarmac alongside the plane as we landed, with
bouquets of flowers. They had been listening to the
music of Duke Ellington through Radio Free America.
There were enough Russian people who knew about the
music and had secret recordings of the Ellington
band. So there was a great, great reception
everywhere we went.
This spring, the musical Sophisticated Ladies opened
at the Lincoln Theatre in Washington. Duke Ellington
performed here many years ago. The show is based on
his music. Mercedes Ellington is the shows artistic
adviser.
MERCEDES ELLINGTON:He lived to work. And so when he
traveled and toured, that was when he was in heaven.
Duke Ellington wrote more than three thousand
musical compositions. He died in 1974. Today, this
native Washingtonian is remembered as one of the
most influential jazz artists of the 20th century.
Im Barbara Klein.
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