We stay with the 1930 RKO picture Check and Double Check for one more Sunday as we visit the song “Old Man Blues,” which also gets a prime feature in the movie.
The Session: Old Man Blues (1930)
Old Man Blues moves along at a fantastic clip. It’s one of those early Ellington sides that shows how Duke could take a basic “blues” structure and make it swing with incredible forward momentum — tight, punchy, and already pointing toward the band’s 1930s evolution.
The Alternate Take: The Harlem Footwarmers (1930)
Recorded for Okeh the very same year, this version was issued under the pseudonym The Harlem Footwarmers - Duke’s way of slipping an extra side into the marketplace without competing with himself. It’s a different arrangement, looser in some spots and more sharply accented in others, and it gives us a fascinating glimpse of how Ellington could rethink the same tune in real time.
The Cover: Through the Ringer
We have one contemporary cover of Old Man Blues — a snappy budget‑label recording by the Washboard Rhythm Boys.
Let’s spin it:
They had me at washboard!
The Remake: Sidney Bechet (1940)
For our remake, we turn to the Old School itself: Sidney Bechet. Recorded for Victor in 1940, Bechet’s soaring soprano sax brings a whole new fire to the composition. It’s bold, brash, and unmistakably Bechet — and it sounds terrific.
The Warehouse Reel: Duke in Action
To close out our movie coverage, here is a clip of the band actually playing "Old Man Blues" in the film. It’s a rare treat to see the 1930 lineup looking sharp and swinging even harder than they do on the record.
So nice to see them in action!
Does the Washboard addition make this your favorite version of the tune, or does Bechet — or Duke himself — still hold the crown?















