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West Coast jazz with a relaxed swing and a pleasant, unexpected moment. On this day in jazz history… On February 11, 1932, Bing Crosby walked into a New York studio to record "St. Louis Blues" with Duke Ellington's orchestra. The pairing made sense. Crosby was already riding the slogan "Bing Was King," moving millions of records with his smooth baritone and commanding national radio. Ellington brought his Cotton Club orchestra and sophisticated horn arrangements that gave the session genuine swing credentials. W.C. Handy's 1914 blues classic got the full treatment. Ellington's dark, shadowy harmonies rendered Crosby's coppery baritone in a new light. The session captured Crosby's scatting style, influenced by Louis Armstrong's recent recording of "Lazy River". This wasn't a novelty crossover product. It was an authentic musical conversation between pop's biggest voice and jazz's most innovative arranger. The recording helped establish how jazz vocabulary could enter mainstream American music without losing its essential character. Quality found its audience. #WestCoastJazz #CoolJazz #PianoJazz #JazzTrio #LaidBackJazz #InstrumentalJazz #MidCenturyJazz All music (including AI-assisted elements) and visuals are original, curated, and produced by Two Cats Jazz Radio. T191_P3