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Ella Fitzgerald

"The First Lady of Song," Ella Fitzgerald was arguably the finest female jazz singer of all time (although some may vote for Sarah Vaughan or Billie Holiday). Blessed with a beautiful voice and a wide range, Fitzgerald could outswing anyone, was a brilliant scat singer, and had near-perfect elocution; one could always understand the words she sang. The one fault was that, since she always sounded so happy to be singing, Fitzgerald did not always dig below the surface of the lyrics she interpreted and she even made a downbeat song such as "Love for Sale" sound joyous. However, when one evaluates her career on a whole, there is simply no one else in her class.

One could never guess from her singing that Ella Fitzgerald's early days were as grim as Billie Holiday's. Growing up in poverty, Fitzgerald was literally homeless for the year before she got her big break. In 1934, she appeared at the Apollo Theater in Harlem, winning an amateur contest by singing "Judy" in the style of her idol, Connee Boswell. After a short stint with Tiny Bradshaw, Fitzgerald was brought to the attention of Chick Webb by Benny Carter (who was in the audience at the Apollo). Webb, who was not impressed by the 17-year-old's appearance, was reluctantly persuaded to let her sing with his orchestra on a one-nighter. She went over well and soon the drummer recognized her commercial potential. Starting in 1935, Fitzgerald began recording with Webb's Orchestra, and by 1937 over half of the band's selections featured her voice. "A-Tisket, A-Tasket" became a huge hit in 1938 and "Undecided" soon followed. During this era, Fitzgerald was essentially a pop/swing singer who was best on ballads while her medium-tempo performances were generally juvenile novelties. She already had a beautiful voice but did not improvise or scat much; that would develop later.

On June 16, 1939, Chick Webb died. It was decided that Fitzgerald would front the orchestra even though she had little to do with the repertoire or hiring or firing the musicians. She retained her popularity and when she broke up the band in 1941 and went solo; it was not long before her Decca recordings contained more than their share of hits. She was teamed with the Ink Spots, Louis Jordan, and the Delta Rhythm Boys for some best-sellers, and in 1946 began working regularly for Norman Granz's Jazz at the Philharmonic. Granz became her manager although it would be nearly a decade before he could get her on his label. A major change occurred in Fitzgerald's singing around this period. She toured with Dizzy Gillespie's big band, adopted bop as part of her style, and started including exciting scat-filled romps in her set. Her recordings of "Lady Be Good," "How High the Moon," and "Flying Home" during 1945-1947 became popular and her stature as a major jazz singer rose as a result. For a time (December 10, 1947-August 28, 1953) she was married to bassist Ray Brown and used his trio as a backup group. Fitzgerald's series of duets with pianist Ellis Larkins in 1950 (a 1954 encore with Larkins was a successful follow-up) found her interpreting George Gershwin songs, predating her upcoming Songbooks series.

After appearing in the film Pete Kelly's Blues in 1955, Fitzgerald signed with Norman Granz's Verve label and over the next few years she would record extensive Songbooks of the music of Cole Porter, the Gershwins, Rodgers & Hart, Duke Ellington, Harold Arlen, Jerome Kern, and Johnny Mercer. Although (with the exception of the Ellington sets) those were not her most jazz-oriented projects (Fitzgerald stuck mostly to the melody and was generally accompanied by string orchestras), the prestigious projects did a great deal to uplift her stature. At the peak of her powers around 1960, Fitzgerald's hilarious live version of "Mack the Knife" (in which she forgot the words and made up her own) from Ella in Berlin is a classic and virtually all of her Verve recordings are worth getting.

Fitzgerald's Capitol and Reprise recordings of 1967-1970 are not on the same level as she attempted to "update" her singing by including pop songs such as "Sunny" and "I Heard It Through the Grapevine," sounding quite silly in the process. But Fitzgerald's later years were saved by Norman Granz's decision to form a new label, Pablo. Starting with a Santa Monica Civic concert in 1972 that is climaxed by Fitzgerald's incredible version of "C Jam Blues" (in which she trades off with and "battles" five classic jazzmen), Fitzgerald was showcased in jazz settings throughout the 1970s with the likes of Count Basie, Oscar Peterson, and Joe Pass, among others. Her voice began to fade during this era and by the 1980s her decline due to age was quite noticeable. Troubles with her eyes and heart knocked her out of action for periods of time, although her increasingly rare appearances found Fitzgerald still retaining her sense of swing and joyful style. By 1994, Ella Fitzgerald was in retirement and she passed away two years later, but she remains a household name and scores of her recordings are easily available on CD. ~ Scott Yanow, Rovi
full bio

Selected Discography

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Track List: The Complete Ella Fitzgerald Song Books

Disc 1
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Disc 16
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Track List: Sings The George And Ira Gershwin Song Book

Disc 1
Disc 2
Disc 3
Disc 4

Comments

linnbell2002
Love Love Love Her
i am so absolutely in love with this woman she was such a wonderful soul and a pure classic in her inspiration to jazz. can never mention this style of music without paying tribute to her legendary contribution .
ccjsp
......ahhhh. . . . . h e r voice is like buttah! never tire of hearing her classic, smooth sound! NO ONE (well, maybe Sarah Vaughn) comes close....
General Motors of Jazz She started out in a neignborhood with Chev's and ended at the ritz in a Cadillac.
I can't say more because, you take may breath away says it all...
eescobar8
The First Lady Of Song - damn right
whitney.d.yo u n g
One word: Timeless. Ella is as fresh today as when she put down this track (Skylark).
pfarley731
Just one word....ELLA !
emmaraldhope
Love Ella!
sarah 1, ella 2. But i LOVE Ella and she is a better scat singer.
I totally disagree with whoever wrote Ella's bio. her one fault was that she didn't dig below the surface of the lyrics she sang... It makes me wonder how much the writer knows about this singer, or how much of her music they have actually heard. Many of the ballads she sang were laced with the blues and filled with such loneliness and longing. The richness of her voice, her unmatched range and her ability to hit notes and phrasing that still amaze, delivered the full spectrum of emotion, in
Ella was by far the best of all. Her voice was like velvet. Vaughn, WIlson, etc. all were good but no one surpassed Ella.


Sarah Vaughn was better, but Ella was a wonderful singer.
maryanndefro n z o
Sorry,but Ella outclassed all the others,by far.I love Sarah Vaughn as well, but she was #2.
Ella has enchanted all of us here at home for most of our lives. She is so versatile in every way especially in the way Her range can make the songs she sings so much more interesting. We just love her and Her sounds!!!!!
A shining window out of the world of stress...
............ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . e n o u g h said........ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
They don't come no better than Ella. A league of her own.
jtucker961
Ms. Fitzgerald's voice has amazed me all my life. The physical range, the stylistic diversity, and just pretty. I hope people are still listening 100 years from now. It would be lovely to have her represent one of the great, great singers of our time. (Glad the bio got updated!)
Great voice...our daughter's namesake. What a treasure she gave this world! (Ms. Fitzgerald and our 6 year old Ella!) :)
wtf? why is this bio of Stan Getz? i want to know about Ella :(
unschool
This bio has now been wrong for over a month. PANDORA, ARE THERE ANY PEOPLE THERE, OR JUST COMPUTERS?
Hmm... Love some Stan Getz.. but I'd like to read about Ella.
saraaboyle
seriously! We couldn't get Ella F.'s bio here?
djh08e
they forgot about Louis in the artist section :(
PANDORA STAFF....at least get the bios right!!!
Show sum luv & give this woman the proper respect she deserves.
sushilover94
Stan's great - but where's the Lady?
jimw53
Ok, well we can all ignore the Stan Getz Bio and talk about Ella anyway, so here it goes! Ella is without a doubt made to sing Jazz or Jazz was made for her to sing! She has the smoothest and quite simply the best voice period! She is the female version of Nat King Cole, whom I think is the best male singer of all time and all generes!
jimw53
Stan I amazing, but why is he listed instead of the Queen of smoothness?
paulusarchit e c t
Why are these bio's regularly mixed up? Who programmed this so badly?
I want to see Ella's bio not Satan Getz Pleeeze!
telebob5
Dum s**ts...
You've given us the bio of Stan Getz instead of Ella Fitzgerald's .
Ella bio is wrong Stan Gets bio shoud be not be here !!!
Classics and standards are smooth as butter off the lips of Ella
This bio is for Stan Getz, not Ella Fitzgerald. Just like the Benny Goodman bio which tells the story of Quincy Jones.
Her name will be remembered for all time. One beautiful woman and what a voice!
shawndabeatt i e
crisp..and clear
eescobar8
Billie Holiday, Sarah Vaughn, Nancy Wilson, and so many others. I love them all but Ella is perfection. Hands-down the greatest female vocalist Jazz ever produced (in my humble opinion).
IT JUST ONE OF THOSE THING?????
makes you want to fall in love
Perfection.. . .
Ella Fitzgerald was perfect
ELLA 'nuff said!!!!
This is what you want to be sitting at home with your honey listining to. This lady was worth remembering. Now, go sit down with your woman and talk to her over this kind of music,,,, Enjoy each other!
She Makes me cry.She was That good!
hell yeah baby she makes me shiver and rally think about my own soul.
laura29024
As a singer myself, my all-time idol is Ella. The greatest female vocalist ever.
linnbell2002
Classy, Timeless, This is Bliss!
barbara31759
LOVE LOVE LOVE this incredible voice - she makes any set of lyrics felt within the soul
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