Dimuendo in Blue
Duke Ellington Lyrics


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There is a gay Lady in blue
Haunting my dreams all the night thru.
She seems to creep into my sleep
Day after day and nights without number
I see her rise right under my eyes
Out of blue shadows while I'm lost in slumber:
There in the dark she is so fair
But with the dawn she's never there
For with the bright morning's new light
I wake and find the dream I've had
In mind was a Lady in Blue
Shadows of the night.
There is a gay Lady in blue

Haunting my dreams all the night thru.
She seems to creep into my sleep
Day after day and nights without number
I see her rise right under my eyes
Out of blue shadows while I'm lost in slumber:
There in the dark she is so fair
But with the dawn she's never there
For with the bright morning's new light
I wake and find the dream I've had




In mind was a Lady in Blue
Shadows of the night.

Overall Meaning

The lyrics to Duke Ellington's song "Lady in Blue" describe a vivid dream that the singer is having, where he is haunted by a beautiful woman dressed in blue. The Lady in Blue appears to him every night in his sleep, and he is entranced by her beauty. However, every morning when he wakes up, she disappears, and he is left with only the memory of her haunting presence. The song describes the Lady in Blue as almost supernatural, rising up out of the blue shadows of the dream world and captivating the singer with her beauty.


The song conveys a sense of longing and desire for something that is unattainable, as the singer is unable to hold onto the Lady in Blue beyond the confines of his dream. The repetition of the opening lines "There is a gay Lady in blue haunting my dreams all the night thru" emphasizes the hold that the Lady in Blue has over the singer's thoughts and emotions, and underscores the power of the dream world to captivate and transport us.


Overall, the lyrics to "Lady in Blue" are a beautiful meditation on the power of dreams and the longing for something that is just out of reach.


Line by Line Meaning

There is a gay Lady in blue
The singer is haunted by the image of a happy, lively woman dressed in blue.


Haunting my dreams all the night thru.
The Lady in Blue appears consistently in the singer's dreams.


She seems to creep into my sleep
The Lady in Blue enters the singer's unconscious mind without his control or awareness.


Day after day and nights without number
The Lady in Blue appears frequently, both during the day and at night.


I see her rise right under my eyes
The singer sees the Lady in Blue appear before him as if she is materializing out of thin air.


Out of blue shadows while I'm lost in slumber:
The Lady in Blue appears in the singer's dreams, emerging from the shadows of his unconscious mind while he sleeps.


There in the dark she is so fair
The Lady in Blue is beautiful and alluring in the darkness of the singer's dreams.


But with the dawn she's never there
When the singer wakes up, the Lady in Blue disappears and is nowhere to be found.


For with the bright morning's new light
The Lady in Blue only exists in the darkness and shadows of the singer's dreams.


I wake and find the dream I've had
The singer realizes that his experience with the Lady in Blue was merely a dream.


In mind was a Lady in Blue
The Lady in Blue exists solely in the singer's imagination and dreamscape.


Shadows of the night.
The Lady in Blue is a product of the darkness and mystery of the night, and disappears with the coming of daylight.




Lyrics © Sony/ATV Music Publishing LLC
Written by: DUKE ELLINGTON, IRVING MILLS

Lyrics Licensed & Provided by LyricFind
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Comments from YouTube:

Christopher Billings

I was there. by myself, 18 years old. I sat in the middle of right field. When Paul Gonsalves was blowing the crowd was jumping, literally. All I could hear was Gonsalves and the crowd. I could not hear Duke Ellington or the drummer. It was like that until the whole band started the Crescendo. The whole crowd was excited. At the end of the Crescendo a nervous George Wein came out but Duke shut him up. The band played another hour, ending with Skin Deep. It was my most treasured memory.

Jorge Sanabria

Amazing. Seems we are all in the concert.

ClockedTXX

nice

Miguel Le Goff

Chistopher thank you! It will be amazing if you write the hole experience!!! Do you remember if a girl with a dress get up in the middle of the solo and start to dance??

Michael Scott

Jay Looney I love your spirit!

Eric Vaughn Hutchins

My mother and father attended. I was eight years old and they had sent me off to sleepaway camp so they could have some time together after my father had been called to fly the Berlin Airlift in 1948 and tactical air support in Korea. My father had just made Major and he and his wife drove to Newport from Westover AFB in his 1954 coral blue and cream white Cadillac Coupe de Ville. I wish they had taken me. I listened to the record many times when my father was still alive, and after. I purchased the stereo version released on CD not too long ago. Amazing moment in music.

9 More Replies...

wildsmiley

To me, this is the perfect track to introduce someone to jazz, especially to those who may think of jazz as boring and pretentious. This performance swings harder and more gloriously than anybody has ever swung before or since.

Walter B

You may be right

mrstep2me

The problem is, this is what Jazz was when it was America's popular music. Unfortunately, it's not what Jazz is now. What Jazz is now has a limited appeal for the masses, especially the youth, who want music to party to, not music to listen to.

D.E.B. B

+mrstep2me This is music to party to. Today's jazz, OTOH, is usually what sounds like several guys all playing a different song. As one jazz performer said, 'I don't like playing in a band, because it's too hard; you have to follow and perfect someone else's song; I like to let it all hang out and play what I want to play'. And that pretty much says it all; no one wants to play someone else's idea of music. They all think they're friggin geniuses. And today's jazz fans are mostly music snobs, who look down on us who don't like bebop and fusion because we 'don't get it'. There's time for solo performances, and there's time to follow the music. And it seemed that from about 1950 on, most just want to jam to their own song; no one wants to be 'just' part of a great band.

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