Paga I Portland Obae ·er June I , 1960 - -- - - - - - ENTERT Al NM ENT E N T E R T A I l'J ,'v~ f l'J r .,ELLA FITZGERALD" A LEGEND IN HER TliME AMA Family Dey and Night Care Program proudly announces a Gala Anniversary banquet in honor ot· our ten years ot" service to chtldren and ramilies or the community, June IJ, 1980, at 6:30 p.m. • 9:30 p.m., West minister PresbYtcrian Church 162-4 N.E. Hancock. Guest speaker: Associate Director Headstan Bureau, Henlay Foster. Donation S12.00 per person. For ticket information call 285-0493. 0 1sec 1 DOWN Many 01· the adJecuves used to describe Ella Fitzgerald's voice seem desianed for the 16 year old who won the series ot talent contests in Harlem Come in and meet l>.J's of Oreaon. ~h,t:- top You've mel lhe r••I. come and m■■t lh■ b■el, Mr. DJ himfflf, John-■-•n•••• V Portland, Ore. • 249-9130 a touch of new orleans BOUI\BON STI\EET WALKING IN FA'T HER'S FOOTSTEPS stories. "Thank you for coming back," they say, "why did you stay away for so long"!" Sold-out performances. The critics stalk the dictionary for new words of praise in more languages than you hear in the U.N. There's hardly a country in the world where Ella isn't known. In a very short time Ella was becoming nationally famous through late night radio broadcasts and recording with Chick Webb, at first skeptical of the young girl from Yonkers, Webb, by now wa~ sufficiently won over to have become Ella's legal guardian, and for a time she lived with him and his wife. Here's Benny Green's succinct appraisal of a career that ha~ delighted the world: "With the possible exception of Louis Armstrong, Ella is the most widely celebrated of any Jazz artist, a Jazz specialist whose singing evolved naturally into a broadly popular style, so appealing the world has more or less fallen at her feet." A piece like this should really end with Ella speaking for herself". "I sometimes ask myself," she says, "Where am I going'! What am I doing• for myself and for others'! Well, God gave me a voice. He gave me something with which lo make other people happy. There must have been a reason." There must have been. We can think of a lot ot· reasons. Bui the simplest seems to make the most sense. Joy. Pure Joy. ., D.J, live d .j. nite Mercer Ellington conducts the famous Duke Ellington Orchestra •• "The All-Time International Favorite·· -- In a Joint Portland concert with Elle Fitzgerald. Thia teaming of two Jazz Immortal• la the only appearance together for the ertlata In the United Statea this year. Tickets for the June 12. 7:00 and 10:00 p.m. performances are priced at t16.00. ,12.60 and ,10.00 end are available at The Civic Auditorium Box Office and at all Portland outlets. .. DJ'S DANCE MAC.H 1 I NE The Club of the 80's that began her 1.:areer. "Fresh," they called it, and still call it. Infectious and happy. Innocent. Girlish, It must be eternal youth, or something close lo it. Eternal youth 1s only part ol Ella today. Critics talk about a new mellowness of her voice. An added dimensmn 10 her ballad singing in par- ticular. The praise is a~ undiminished a~ the voice. In t'act, a\ time goes by, they both seem to get stronger. "She is the best equipped vocalist ever 10 grace the Jazz scene," wrote British music critic Benny Green, "having II freakishly wide vocal range, literally perfect intonation, and an acutely ,ens1t1ve ear for harmonic changes ... There 1s to her voice a lilting lullaby quality which renders even commonplace material movina,' • Bing Crosby said it more succinctly, "Man, woman or child, Ella is the area test." If a career can be measured by its statistics, then Ella's as a pop/Jazz 1 vocalist is unbeatable. Her more than 100 albums have sold more than 2S million copies. Down Beat named her best female Jazz singer eighteen con• secu1ive years. Ella's tours have taken on something of the tlavor of triumphal marches in recent years. Newspapers herald her arrival with prominent photos and Ella Fitzgerald •· ""The First Lady of Jezz·· •• brings her magic to Port- land o n June 12 for a Joint concert appearance w ith t he Duke Ellington Orchestra conducted by Mercer Ellington. Show will benefit The Oregon Association of Hoaptlela Foundet lon. Tickets priced at ,1&.00, ,12.60 and ,10.00 -- are on nle at Port land Civic Auditori um Box Office ad at all the usual Portland outlets. Two performances are scheduled •· at 7:00 and 10:00 p .m . -- for the on ly Ella and Ellington ap- pearance together scheduled for the United States In 1980. to The day after his father's funeral in May, 1974, Mercer Ellington took the orchestra to Bermuda as previously committed to play at IBM's Golden Circle Convention. It was a hard decision to make, and hard to fulfill, but in doing so Mercer faithfully mainlained a tradition established by Duke Ellington during his five triumphant decades as a bandleader. Since that time, Mercer has been at pains to maintain that tradition musically as well as professionally and ethnically. The band's library contains all the famous compositions and arrangements, and he has steadily reac- tivated items in it that had become less familiar through neglect in recent years. His father was so prolific that there was inevitably a tendency to em- phasize the "new one" at the expense of the past. It is now possible to see his majestic output in some kind of perspective and to restore classics to the prominence they deserve. This Mercer is systematically doing, and he is also able to spring enlightening surprises by playing compositions written by his father that were never publicly performed. With the Ellington Orchestra u1,1der Mercer's leadership, Duke Ellington's music will continue to be a healthY,i.and Joyous element in twentieth-century life. . Mercer Kennedy Ellington, composer, arranger and trumpet player, is the son of Duke Ellington. He was born in Washington, D.C., on November 3rd, IIJ19. An association with his father's orchestra began when he was eight years old. Growing up as the loyal son or an internationally famous father entailed both rewards and frustrations. Mercer's own individual talents, particularly as an arranger and a composer, were inevitably overshadowed by those of his father. Nevertheless, such creations as Things Ain't Whal They Use To be, Jumpin Punkins, John Hardy's Wife, Blue Serge, The Girl In My Dreams, Pass Me By, Moon Misl, Maroon, Go1 My Fool In The Door, Ruint, Broad- way Babe, Indelible, and Be Pa1ien1 testify to his creative ability, Many of these numbers, incidently, can be heard in an excellent MCA album (349) entitled BLACK AND TAN FANTASY, made under Mercer's name with an all-star band. ' . restaurant LUNCHES AND DINNERS FEATURING A SELEC-1 TION OF TRADITIONAL SOUTHERN DISHES. OPEN 5 DAYS A WEEK FO R BREAKFAST - - SAT . & SU N. OPEN 11 o'clock Sunday Buffet noon to 4 pm Happy Hours 7 - 10 AM & 4 - 7 PM MON .-FRI . Live entertainment 7 days a w e.e k 287-8723 1530 NE GRAND AVENUE AT WEIDLER free • .. • ..,,, on the ·o"' ~ PR€5€NTS ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• A PERSONAL MOMENT FOR THOS E WHO CARE JIMMY ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• As a child remember looking through the show window a t the candy lnsl? We all want peace, love and harmony but each have that glass between us and the goodies. We pres5 our fl(lM' to the glass and we are so close and yet so far away. , Just as the candy Isn't the answer to nutrition for the child. ' as adults WI' loo may be looking on the wrong side of rhe glass. When one moves from the glass love will find them. rn,w,. A 1 1 - 11 1 111 1 11111111111111111111111 111 PRESENTED BY ELLA FITTGERALD and tht: mtcma11onallv tam, u~ DUKE. I LLINC, Tl 1. l )Rl HES T J11 tc:iJ bv "v1ERl ER ELLINC, H , , rt, Jun I• l rm an J IO rm Pc nlan ' 1 U 'i •t 1 •ran Re rve }ft 1 all l ~ , at<1SI th, r I 1v ~u ht ,num AMERICAN STATE BANK I 2737N.E. Union SI H,, • ,I F, un Mill t 11 R, I 212-2211 I I nl~ , ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• I W:ITH'ERS,POON • I suNDAY, .JONe"1sth 6:00 P.M. $6.50 10:00 P.M . $6.50 Advance Tickets now being sold at: JAZZ DE OPUS JJ n.w. 2nd ave. FREDERICK 6 NELSON'S TICKET PLACE downtown MUSIC .MILL - NNI