The Thrill Is Gone / Django
~ Recording by Jeff Goldblum and The Mildred Snitzer Orchestra featuring Miley Cyrus
Appears on releases
| # | Title | Length | Track artist | Release title | Release artist | Release group type | Country/Date | Label | Catalog# |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Official | |||||||||
| 1.4 | The Thrill Is Gone / Django | 3:55 | Jeff Goldblum and The Mildred Snitzer Orchestra featuring Miley Cyrus | I Shouldn’t Be Telling You This | Jeff Goldblum and The Mildred Snitzer Orchestra | Album |
| Decca Records | B0031206-02 |
| 1.4 | The Thrill Is Gone / Django | 3:55 | Jeff Goldblum & The Mildred Snitzer Orchestra feat. Miley Cyrus | I Shouldn’t Be Telling You This | Jeff Goldblum & The Mildred Snitzer Orchestra | Album |
| Decca Records | |
| 1.4 | The Thrill Is Gone / Django | 3:55 | Jeff Goldblum and The Mildred Snitzer Orchestra featuring Miley Cyrus | I Shouldn’t Be Telling You This | Jeff Goldblum and The Mildred Snitzer Orchestra | Album |
| Decca Records, Decca 90 (Series of releases throughout 2019 in celebration of Decca's 90 years of existence.) | 00602508060519 |
Relationships
| assistant engineer: | Ryan Lytle Brian Rajaratnam |
|---|---|
| engineer: | Bryan Cook (US engineer) Andrew Wyatt (US vocalist, songwriter) (task: vocal) |
| producer and mixer: | Bryan Cook (US engineer) |
| piano: | Jeff Goldblum |
| solo saxophone: | James King (US multi-instrumentalist, Fitz and The Tantrums) |
| guest vocals: | Miley Cyrus |
| arranger: | Joe Bagg Alex Frank (bassist) John Storie |
| recorded at: | Henson Recording Studios (former A&M Studios) in Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, United States |
|---|
| recording of: | 1. The Thrill Is Gone (Henderson/Brown song, first performed in 1931) (cover, medley) 2. Django (cover, medley) |
|---|
Related works
Django
| composer: | John Lewis (pianist, member of Modern Jazz Quartet) (in 1954) |
|---|
| publisher: | MJQ Music, Inc. |
|---|
| is the basis for: | Baby Variants on a Theme of John Lewis (Django) |
|---|
The Thrill Is Gone (Henderson/Brown song, first performed in 1931)
| lyricist: | Lew Brown |
|---|---|
| composer: | Ray Henderson |
| publisher: | DeSylva, Brown and Henderson, Inc. Redwood Music Ltd. (Carlin) |
|---|
Play on ListenBrainz