Duke Ellington
Duke Ellington - US composer, pianist & jazz bandleader
Person from United States
Genres: big band, jazz, swing
Radio Stations
Duke Ellington - Songs (892)
| Artist | Song title | Like / Dislike | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Duke Ellington | Concerto For Cootie | ||
| Duke Ellington | Porgy (Alt Tk -C) | ||
| Duke Ellington | Rose Of The Rio Grande | ||
| Duke Ellington | Black and Tan Fantasy | ||
| Duke Ellington | Who knows | ||
| Duke Ellington | Never no lament | ||
| Duke Ellington | Going Up | ||
| Duke Ellington | Rockin' In Rhythm [1931] | ||
| Duke Ellington | Hop, Skip, Jump | ||
| Duke Ellington | Artistry in Rhythm | ||
| Duke Ellington | Honneysuckle Rose | ||
| Duke Ellington | Toot Suite: C. Red Carpet (Part 1) | ||
| Duke Ellington | Perfume Suite pt2 | ||
| Duke Ellington | Breakfast dance | ||
| Duke Ellington | Slippery horn | ||
| Duke Ellington | Is God A Three-Letter Word For Love? (Part I) | ||
| Duke Ellington | Slippery Horn | ||
| Duke Ellington | Black Beauty | ||
| Duke Ellington | 'Sir Duke' | ||
| Duke Ellington | Take The 'A' Train [1941] | ||
| Duke Ellington | Five O'Clock Whistle | ||
| Duke Ellington | Solitude (Brunswick Records) [1934] | ||
| Duke Ellington | Fancy Dan | ||
| Duke Ellington | Love Like This Can’t Last | ||
| Duke Ellington | Second Line | ||
| Duke Ellington | Main Stem [1942] | ||
| Duke Ellington | 1930 | ||
| Duke Ellington | Four and one-half street | ||
| Duke Ellington | Jubilee Stomp [1928] | ||
| Duke Ellington | Minnie the Moocher |
Concerto For Cootie
Porgy (Alt Tk -C)
Rose Of The Rio Grande
Black and Tan Fantasy
Who knows
Never no lament
Going Up
Rockin' In Rhythm [1931]
Hop, Skip, Jump
Artistry in Rhythm
Honneysuckle Rose
Toot Suite: C. Red Carpet (Part 1)
Perfume Suite pt2
Breakfast dance
Slippery horn
Is God A Three-Letter Word For Love? (Part I)
Slippery Horn
Black Beauty
'Sir Duke'
Take The 'A' Train [1941]
Five O'Clock Whistle
Solitude (Brunswick Records) [1934]
Fancy Dan
Love Like This Can’t Last
Second Line
Main Stem [1942]
1930
Four and one-half street
Jubilee Stomp [1928]
Minnie the Moocher