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Masterpieces By Ellington (Analogue Productions/Mono/180gr)

Format: LP

Genre:

$59.99

Out of stock

Masterpieces By Ellington shines from an astonishingly brief period of history that gave the recording industry two of its greatest achievements — the introduction of magnetic tape recording and the 33 1/3 LP, or long-playing record.

Four years. That’s all it took to go from the discovery by Americans, of German advancements in the field of sound recording, to the marketing of tape decks in the U.S. by the Ampex company, to Columbia’s unveiling of its 12” LP, and the first long-playing record to be sold to consumers.

The four selections contained here catapulted the Maestro Ellington into the LP era, as the great composer/arranger/pianist and his matchless orchestra took full advantage of the possibilities afforded by magnetic tape recording and the still-new 33 1/3 RPM LP to, for the first time, capture uncut concert arrangements of their signature songs.

This album wouldn’t have been possible without a chain of events starting at the end of World War II. Recorded in December 1950, just five years after Germany fell to the Allies, revealing the Germans’ advances in magnetic tape recording, Ellington’s master work holds its wonder still today and the recording quality hands-down betters the sound of many modern-day albums.

In 1950, two years into the LP era and the transition from disc to magnetic tape recording, Columbia Records got Duke Ellington and his orchestra into the studio to cut a long-playing record. The Columbia 30th Street Studio opened in 1949 and Masterpieces was one of the first recordings done in the studio!

December 19, 1950. Masterpieces by Ellington recorded at Columbia’s 30th Street Studio. Released in 1951. Recording engineers Fred Plaut and Harold Chapman. Recorded on an Ampex 200, using 3M-111 magnetic tape running at 15 inches per second.

The Columbia 30th Street Studio (CBS 30th Street Studio) nicknamed “The Church” was considered by some to be the best-sounding room in its time and others consider it to have been the greatest recording studio in history.

Masterpieces is a revelation and a throwback to a golden recording age. So much history and so much luck combined make this album truly special.

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