Artist Lounge: Dave Brubeck
Moggers' favorites by Dave Brubeck
Subscribe to feed
Dakota Austin is a 12-year-old sax player, who happened to say the right thing at the right time. While at the Litchfield Jazz Festival’s camp last week, he met 87-year-old Dave Brubeck, and told Dave that he was his inspiration, and also "I want to play ‘Take Five’ with you." Brubeck asked him if [...]
~~
Original Story: http://anaphoramusic.com/blog/?p=603
I've been trying to figure out a way to tell the story behind Paul Desmond's Take Five, because it's a difficult story to convey in writing. The video I've embedded, however, gives me a way to tell it. The embedded video is a fun vocalese version done by Kurt Elling and Al Jarreau using the lyrics written by Iola Brubeck, Dave's wife. Watch the video before you read the rest of the story. So, the story. Take Five gets its name from the quintuple (five beats per meas... MORE
The cool could not survive the 1960s, when all the repressed energies and conflicts of American society burst to the surface. But in its own time it was more than just a passing style. The cool did not try to change the world; rather, it was an end in itself. It was a way of being that turned its back on the anxious striving and the inauthentic routines of corporate, middle-class life. To be cool was its own reward, a state of grace. It’s hard to imagine the stars linin... MORE
I know this is all over YouTube, but it's such a classic moment in Jazz that I can't help but take "Time Out" to share!
My late Dad saw the Quartet at the Auckland Town Hall, New Zealand, back in 1962, and had Joe Morello, one of his drumming heroes, sign the program. I saw the band in it's near-current incarnation at both Villa Montalvo and San Francisco in CA, and was also lucky enough to meet Dave.
1. Fats Domino, “I’m Gonna Be a Wheel Some Day.” It’s impossible to listen to Fats without smiling. 2. Dave Brubeck, “Kathy’s Waltz.” I wonder how many American households in the late 50s and early 60s counted Time Out as the only jazz LP in their collection. 3. The Fiestas, “So Fine.” Written by Johnny Otis. 4. John Coltrane, “Naima.” How many of those households that owned Time Out also had a copy of Giant Steps? Ours didn’t. 5. The Detroit Zoological Park, “Soundsou... MORE







enlarge





















