As we hit 1931 with Duke Ellington, we arrive at one of the crown jewels of his entire output: Mood Indigo. Few pieces announce the Ellington sound so completely — the colors, the poise, the sly melancholy, the sense that the band is painting with air.
The discography gets a little twisty right out of the gate. The first recording seems to be this Okeh release credited to the Harlem Footwarmers:
But the waters get muddy, because there’s also this Brunswick recording under the Jungle Band name:
Dreamy Blues was the original title — and only appeared on the very first run — before the tune became Mood Indigo forever after.
Whatever the case, the Victor version from 1931 is the one that became famous, and it still sounds magnificent:
This is the first Ellington original that inspired a zillion cover versions and remakes almost immediately. Everyone wanted a piece of that mood.
Early Covers (1931–1934)
A more predictable candidate to cover Ellington was Jimmie Lunceford, whose band cut this terrific version for Decca in 1934:
A lovely arrangement by alto sax man Willie Smith, who always had a knack for elegance.
Here’s a fascinating Hawaiian‑style take from Felix Mendelssohn and his Hawaiian Serenaders, recorded for British Columbia in 1942:
From 1945, we get Andre Kostelanetz with a lush orchestral version on American Columbia:
Jumping to 1955, here’s a mambo version by Pérez Prado on RCA Victor:
From 1956, Marty Gold gives us a bachelor‑pad arrangement on his Vik album Wired for Sound:
Also from 1956, pianist Johnny Maddox tones down the honky‑tonk for this Dot Records 45:
The Co‑Composer Speaks (1957)
Barney (Don't call me 'Albany') Bigard, Duke’s longtime clarinetist and co‑composer of Mood Indigo, recorded his own extended version for his 1957 Liberty album Jazz Hall of Fame:
Pretty cool to hear him stretch out on the tune he helped create.
A Country Twist (1961)
One more before we wrap: in 1961, country piano master Floyd Cramer released this version as the flipside of his RCA Victor hit “On the Rebound”
Nice touch — it’s simple, warm, and unmistakably Cramer.
Tomorrow’s side session will explore vocal versions, and there are some beauties waiting in the wings as Mood Indigo becomes a whole different shade of blue!










