add: 21 Feb 2021
upd: 27 Sep 2022

Cotton Tail - Jimmy Blanton Full Bass Line

Format: .pdf
Number of pages: 6
from «Duke Ellington at Fargo, 1940 Live» Book-of-the-Month (1978)

Reference video:

If this link to the video is broken, please report it to us so we can replace it as soon as possible.

If you like this video, please buy the original music and support jazz music and jazz artists!


Big Band

Recorded in Hollywood, 1940

  • Duke Ellington – piano
  • Billy Straynhorn - arrang.
  • Johnny Hodges, Otto Hardwick – alto saxophone
  • Ben Webster – tenor saxophone
  • Harry Carney – baritone saxophone
  • Barney Bigard – clarinet
  • Rex Stewart – cornet
  • Ray Nance, Wallace Jones, Cootie Williams – trumpet
  • Tricky Sam Nanton, Juan Tizol, Lawrence Brown – trombone
  • Jimmy Blanton – bass
  • Fred Guy – guitar
  • Sonny Greer – drums

Rate this transcription: 
4.666665
Average: 4.7 (3 votes)
To rate this transcription you must be authenticated!
Share
Jimmy Blanton
Jimmy Blanton

Jimmy Blanton

Jimmy Blanton, byname of James Blanton, (born October 1918, Chattanooga, Tennessee, U.S.—died July 30, 1942, Monrovia, California), American jazz musician whose innovative string bass techniques and concepts, displayed during his two years in the Duke Ellington band, made him by far the major influence on subsequent jazz bassists for several decades.

While based in St. Louis, Blanton played in the Jeter-Pillars and Fate Marable bands, both notable “territory bands” (i.e., those in the South, Southwest, and Midwest), before Ellington hired him in 1939. He was a key figure in Ellington’s greatest period. His mobile swing and his remarkably full, resonant, pizzicato tones were the band’s foundation. His original technique permitted him an unprecedented rhythmic variety on his instrument, allowing him to play melodic phrasing instead of conventional, swing-era “walking” metre lines in solos; his harmonies, too, were considered advanced for the swing era.

In 1939–40 Ellington recorded a series of piano and bass duets with Blanton, including “Pitter Panther Patter,” “Sophisticated Lady,” and “Body and Soul.” The bassist was also featured in classic Ellington band recordings such as “Jack the Bear” and “Ko-Ko”; altogether he made more than 130 recordings with Ellington, together with other recordings led by Ellington sidemen. In 1941, ill from tuberculosis, he entered a California sanitorium, ending a brief, brilliant career.

from Britannica

Preview:

Cotton Tail - Jimmy Blanton Full Bass Line
click on the image above to view the demo
Do you want to view a more detailed demo page? Contact us!

Buy Now!

€3.49€2.99

Before purchasing a transcription that is not a Full Bass Score (eg, an extracted solo, a bass line for some choruses, the melody of the piece), please read the opening minute and second at the top left of the preview image.

All transcriptions of Jimmy Blanton (11)


Suggested Transcriptions (42)