The Afro-Eurasian Eclipse


The Afro-Eurasian Eclipse is a studio album by American pianist, composer, and bandleader Duke Ellington. First premiered at the Monterey Jazz Festival in 1970, it was recorded the following year in 1971 and released on the Fantasy label in 1975. Like other world music-influenced suites composed in the last decade of his life, The Afro-Eurasian Eclipse was called by NPR music critic David Brent Johnson one of Ellington's, "late-period masterpieces".
The album opens with a short spoken word introduction in which Ellington explains that the suite's title is inspired by Marshall McLuhan's vision of the onset of global cultural identity; Ellington explained: "Mr. McLuhan says that the whole world is going oriental and that no one will be able to retain his or her identity, not even the Orientals. And of course we travel around the world a lot, and in the last five to six years we too have noticed this thing to be true."

Reception

AllMusic gave the album four stars out of five, with Rovi Staff describing it as "Compelling, cosmopolitan, and organic... All in all, a textured, cross-cultural treat for the ears". Meanwhile, musicologist Edward Green of the Manhattan School of Music was critical of the album's concept, writing, "there are occasional evocations of Asia in this album... But they arise, it appears, from a source at once transient and superficial. Ellington's heart simply was elsewhere—always given to American music; and most specifically African-American music."

Legacy

The 2001 Duke Ellington tribute album Red Hot + Indigo includes two compositions from The Afro-Eurasian Eclipse: "Didjeridoo" is performed by the jazz-influenced post-rock band Tortoise, and "Acht O'Clock Rock" is performed by jazz-fusion trio Medeski Martin & Wood, who also covered "Chinoiserie" on their 1995 album Friday Afternoon in the Universe, and have often performed these and other Ellington compositions live.

Track listing

All compositions are written by Duke Ellington.
Notes:

Personnel

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