
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


“Easter Parade”- Roy Eldridge (102)
Standards Rating 5 Difficulty Rating 5
Irving Berlin’s “Easter Parade,” first drafted in 1917 and introduced in As Thousands Cheer (1933), remains one of the most graceful standards of the American songbook. Its balanced 32-bar AABA design, gentle chromatic inflections, and elegant melodic lift evoke the optimism of springtime in New York, making it a natural vehicle for improvisers who appreciate Berlin’s clean, song-focused craft.
Roy Eldridge’s 1944 Decca recording with his sextet is one of the tune’s most distinguished small-group treatments. Eldridge approaches the melody with poised lyricism, allowing his trumpet to float over Eddie Heywood’s polished rhythm section. But beyond the beauty of this performance lies the depth of Eldridge’s influence: he was the crucial bridge between Louis Armstrong’s foundational swing style and the harmonic daring of modern jazz. His command of upper-register trumpet playing, his rhythmic fire, and especially his use of substitute harmonies laid essential groundwork for Dizzy Gillespie and the bebop generation. On “Easter Parade,” Eldridge tempers his trademark intensity, revealing a master melodist whose innovations shaped the direction of jazz trumpet for decades to come
Roy Eldridge Sextet
Sarah Vaughan and Billy Eckstine
Spotify Playlist #2
By Jay Sweet5
55 ratings
“Easter Parade”- Roy Eldridge (102)
Standards Rating 5 Difficulty Rating 5
Irving Berlin’s “Easter Parade,” first drafted in 1917 and introduced in As Thousands Cheer (1933), remains one of the most graceful standards of the American songbook. Its balanced 32-bar AABA design, gentle chromatic inflections, and elegant melodic lift evoke the optimism of springtime in New York, making it a natural vehicle for improvisers who appreciate Berlin’s clean, song-focused craft.
Roy Eldridge’s 1944 Decca recording with his sextet is one of the tune’s most distinguished small-group treatments. Eldridge approaches the melody with poised lyricism, allowing his trumpet to float over Eddie Heywood’s polished rhythm section. But beyond the beauty of this performance lies the depth of Eldridge’s influence: he was the crucial bridge between Louis Armstrong’s foundational swing style and the harmonic daring of modern jazz. His command of upper-register trumpet playing, his rhythmic fire, and especially his use of substitute harmonies laid essential groundwork for Dizzy Gillespie and the bebop generation. On “Easter Parade,” Eldridge tempers his trademark intensity, revealing a master melodist whose innovations shaped the direction of jazz trumpet for decades to come
Roy Eldridge Sextet
Sarah Vaughan and Billy Eckstine
Spotify Playlist #2

153 Listeners

188 Listeners

87,412 Listeners

112,426 Listeners

16 Listeners

59,403 Listeners

1,993 Listeners

12,463 Listeners

16,351 Listeners

50,232 Listeners

15,948 Listeners

10,784 Listeners

4,530 Listeners

522 Listeners

33 Listeners