That’s the one most folks know — Juan’s steady tone leading the way, exotic and hypnotic.
But here’s the twist: Duke had already recorded Caravan months earlier, in late 1936, as part of a small Ellington unit fronted by clarinetist Barney Bigard. That version was released on Irving Mills’ Variety label under the name Barney Bigard and His Jazzopaters:
It’s a fascinating contrast. Just Juan on trombone, Barney on clarinet, Cootie Williams on trumpet, Harry Carney on baritone sax, and a rhythm section of Duke, Billy Taylor (bass), and Sonny Greer (drums). No full band needed — the mood is all there.
Incidentally, both Master and Variety were Irving Mills creations. The man didn’t miss a trick.
Caravan Keeps Rolling
Duke performed Caravan often — on radio, in concert, and in revised studio versions. One notable re-recording came in 1945 for Victor:
By then, Juan Tizol had left the band, and Duke’s name had started appearing as co-composer. Irving Mills still got credit too, ostensibly for lyrics Duke rarely used.
Jump to 1951 and we find a curious version on Mercer Records credited to The Coronets:
Who were The Coronets? Listen closely - Juan’s valve trombone is unmistakable, so you don't even need to read the label to know it's him. Willie Smith, Duke's alto sax player at the time, is also credited, and Duke's right-hand man Billy Strayhorn is listed as director. Throw in that Mercer was Duke’s son’s name, and you don't have to be Sgt. Friday to know this is clearly an Ellington unit in disguise. Shades of The Whoopee Makers!
A treat from around this time is a video of Juan with the band:
LP Era with a Vocal Turn
It’s a cool, expanded take - LP format in full swing - but again, no Juan Tizol, who was between stints with the band.
Then in 1957, we get what may be the only Duke-led version with lyrics, sung by none other than Ella Fitzgerald:
If you’re only going to have one vocal version, Ella’s the one to have. It's from the essential Verve album Ella Fitzgerald Sings the Duke Ellington Song Book.
Hidden Tracks and Bonus Rides
We wrap with two versions recorded in the 1960s but released much later - because what’s a Duke journey without a little unreleased intrigue?
First, a 1962 recording featuring tenor sax star Paul Gonsalves, released in 1984 on Fantasy:
A Ride Through the Decades
From small-unit mystery to full-band majesty, from label sleight-of-hand to LP expansion, Caravan rolled on — always with Juan’s signature sound at its heart. Whether front and center or tucked behind a pseudonym, his trombone steered the journey.















