An Instrumental Kiss
Like many of Duke’s songs, this one was first recorded as an instrumental before acquiring lyrics.
Johnny and Mary One More Time
Following the trend of the last few songs we’ve covered, Johnny Hodges recorded it a couple of weeks later with a small unit drawn from the main band. And since the tune now had lyrics, vocalist Mary McHugh was back:
This was the fourth and final session to feature Mary with Johnny. As I’ve mentioned before, I don’t know anything else about her - it’s as if she appeared just long enough to record these sides and then vanished. But I’ll keep digging!
This version was also popular upon its original release.
The lyrics are credited to Irving Mills and Irving Gordon, the same pair who appeared on the labels for “Pyramid,” which didn’t seem to have a vocal version. Gordon is most famous for later writing the Nat King Cole hit Unforgettable, and I remember him making the rounds when Natalie Cole successfully revived the song in the 1990s.
A Sleeper Hit Waiting for Its Moment
As with some of the other songs from this period, Prelude to a Kiss didn’t get much traction at the time. But unlike those others, it eventually made a spectacular comeback and became something of a standard.
It hadn’t been played much up to that point, but Duke selected it for his 1945 Victor sessions revisiting several of his most popular songs:
It kind of sounds like it had been waiting for Ray Nance’s violin all this time!
Prelude Finds Its Second Life
Duke still didn’t feature the song much for the rest of the 1940s, but he began including it in concerts in the early 1950s and recorded it a few more times.
He cut a version for his 1954 Capitol album The Duke Plays Ellington, a trio date with bassist Wendell Marshall and drummer Butch Ballard:
Next came this 1956 recording that wasn’t issued until 1987:
I don’t know the circumstances of this session or why it remained unreleased for so long, but Johnny Hodges’ alto is fabulous as always.
A Standard at Last
The next version is from Duke’s 1958 Columbia album Ellington Indigos:
The early stereo sounds great on this extended arrangement, with another terrific solo from Johnny.
By this time, Prelude to a Kiss had become a popular standard, and Duke continued to feature it from that point on.
But it was quite a long prelude!










