The Dave Brubeck Quartet: Brubeck on piano, Paul Desmond on alto sax, Joe Morello on drums, and Eugene Wright on bass. |
A wonderful photo of Dave Brubeck at the piano. |
The jazz pianist Dave Brubeck was a remarkable artist.
Brubeck was the rare jazz artist who was fortunate enough to become popular without
compromising his ideas about jazz. He expanded the palette of jazz, as he let rhythms
and melodies from cultures around the world influence his music, and he brought
jazz out of strict 4/4 rhythm and into other time signatures. Brubeck was also
a remarkable composer who wrote many memorable songs, as well as classical
pieces like cantatas and oratorios. To cap it all off, Dave Brubeck was by all
accounts the nicest person you’d ever want to meet.
I had the good fortune of meeting Dave Brubeck twice. When I
was in college I interned for the journalist Hedrick Smith, who at the time was
working on his 2001 documentary “Rediscovering Dave Brubeck.” I had the chance
to go backstage with Smith after a Brubeck concert and meet Dave, and he was
very nice, a true gentleman. I wrote a longer piece about my memories of Dave Brubeck, and I was lucky enough to see him in concert 5 times.
Dave Brubeck’s recording career spanned nearly sixty years,
and he left behind many superb recordings. But where do you start with such a
formidable discography? To help you get introduced to a great jazz artist, I compiled
a list of the 10 Essential Dave Brubeck albums. Of course there are many more
excellent recordings that Brubeck made, but these would be a great entry point
into his music. Albums are listed in the order they were recorded.
Jazz at Oberlin, 1953. This album was a live recording
made on the campus of Oberlin College. Brubeck was hugely popular among college
kids in the 1950’s and 1960’s, and he made several live recordings on college
campuses. After suffering a neck and back injury in a diving accident in 1951,
Brubeck, then the leader of a jazz trio was looking for someone else to join
his group so he wouldn’t have to be the only soloist. Fortunately, he reconnected with the
alto saxophonist Paul Desmond. Brubeck and Desmond had met during their military service in World War II. Desmond’s light and airy tone was reminiscent of
Stan Getz’s sound on the tenor saxophone, and it contrasted well with Brubeck’
pounding approach to the piano keyboard. Brubeck and Desmond’s musical
partnership lasted for more than a quarter of a century, until Desmond’s death
from lung cancer in 1977. Jazz at Oberlin shows the close musical connection
that Brubeck and Desmond had on songs like “These Foolish Things” and “Just the
Way You Look Tonight.”
Brubeck Time, recorded 1954. Dave Brubeck was so popular in
1954 that he made the cover of Time magazine.
He was the second jazz musician to be on the cover of Time, and Brubeck himself said that the honor should have gone to
Duke Ellington. The title of Brubeck Time was meant to play off of this
connection, and the album cover even featured the painting of Brubeck that
adorned the cover of Time. The album
included the classic song “Audrey,” a beautiful ballad that was Desmond and
Brubeck’s ode to Audrey Hepburn. There were also swingers like “Jeepers
Creepers” and “Stompin’ for Mili” that highlighted Brubeck and Desmond’s
facility with uptempo songs.
Jazz Impressions of Eurasia, recorded 1958. By 1958,
drummer Joe Morello had joined Brubeck’s quartet, and now Brubeck had a drummer
capable of playing the complex rhythms and time signatures that he wanted to experiment
with. Paul Desmond and Morello didn’t get along at first, as Desmond found
Morello’s style too loud and flashy for his tastes. Eventually though, Desmond
realized what Morello could bring to the group. Brubeck was also coming into
his own as a composer, and he wrote all of the songs on Jazz Impressions of
Eurasia. The music was inspired by the sounds that Brubeck heard on a long world
tour sponsored by the U.S. State Department. The album covers a lot of ground,
from the stately serenity of “Brandenburg Gate,” to the tense and exciting
rhythms of “The Golden Horn.”
Time Out, 1959. This was Dave Brubeck’s most famous album,
and his best-selling. It included the catchy hit “Take Five,” which was written
by Paul Desmond. All of the songs on Time Out were in unique time signatures,
ranging from the 5/4 meter of “Take Five” to the 9/8 of “Blue Rondo a la Turk.”
Columbia Records, Brubeck’s label, was nervous about Time Out for three
reasons: All of the songs were originals, with no “standards” that the
record-buying public was already familiar with, the songs were in weird time
signatures, which meant that people couldn’t dance to the record, and the cover
featured an abstract painting by S. Neil Fujita. Of course, all those
objections proved to be foolish, as Time Out went on to sell a million copies
and peaked at number two on the Billboard
pop album charts. Bassist Eugene Wright had joined the Brubeck Quartet in
late 1958, and now the classic lineup of the Dave Brubeck Quartet was complete. Time Out is a classic album that was one of the first jazz albums I ever
heard, and it remains fresh and vibrant more than 50 years after it was recorded.
Time Further Out, 1961. A sequel of sorts to Time Out, Time
Further Out was another exploration of unique time signatures, and featured
classic Brubeck songs like “It’s a Raggy Waltz,” and the supremely catchy 7/4
song “Unsquare Dance.” The album was a superb showcase for drummer Joe Morello,
who demonstrated his ability to master any time signature thrown at him. Brubeck
went on to record further albums of unique time signatures, Countdown-Time in
Outer Space, Time Changes, and Time In, which are all excellent.
The Dave Brubeck Quartet at Carnegie Hall, 1963. Before
this live performance in February 1963, Joe Morello was recovering from the
flu, and didn’t feel like playing. Eugene Wright, Paul Desmond, and bandleader
Dave Brubeck all felt a little uptight. But you can’t tell any of that on this
amazing two-disc set of an unforgettable concert. From the opening of “St.
Louis Blues,” you can tell that this band is cooking, swinging their absolute
hardest. Brubeck’s solo finds him charging aggressively ahead like a
locomotive. Morello has a wonderful solo on “Castilian Drums.” All of the music
is outstanding, but the highlight has to be the super fast version of “Blue
Rondo a la Turk.” When Brubeck starts the song you think there’s no way the
group will be able to keep it going at that pace, but they do. This concert
showcases the Dave Brubeck Quartet at the peak of their powers.
Jazz Impressions of
Japan, 1964. A superb album full of the sounds and textures that Brubeck
absorbed during the Quartet’s tour of Japan in 1964. It includes the catchy “Toki’s
Theme,” which is close as Brubeck ever came to rock and roll, as well as the
moving “Koto Song,” which was a highlight of Brubeck live performances for
decades to come.
Their Last Time Out, recorded in 1967. Unreleased until
2011, this two-disc set features the very last concert of the classic lineup of
the Dave Brubeck Quartet, comprising Paul Desmond on alto sax, Eugene Wright on
bass, and Joe Morello on drums. Brubeck wanted a break from touring so he could
focus on writing longer pieces of music. Within a year Brubeck was back on the
road with a new group. The classic lineup would reform for a brief 25th
anniversary tour in 1976. Their Last Time Out is not only a historic concert;
it’s also full of great music, as these four men were all at the top of their
games. There are songs that were staples of Brubeck’s concerts, like “St. Louis
Blues,” “Take the A Train,” and of course “Take Five,” but also “Cielito Lindo”
and “La Paloma Azul” that the Quartet had recently recorded for the Bravo!
Brubeck! LP.
1975: The Duets,
1975. This album of duets between Brubeck and Paul Desmond shows off their deep
musical connection. The music is made more poignant by the fact that Desmond
died of lung cancer less than two years after this album was recorded. Highlights
include a moving version of “Koto Song.”
Indian Summer, 2007. This album of piano solos was the
last recording released by Dave Brubeck in his lifetime. As befitting the
title, the songs are mainly ones from Brubeck’s youth, as he looked back over a
lifetime of music. Indian Summer proved that Brubeck was still a vital jazz
artist in his 80’s.
Dave Brubeck left behind many wonderful recordings, and he
will continue to be remembered as one of the key American jazz artists of the
20th century.
October 23, 2018: I've written a sequel to this post, "10 More Essential Dave Brubeck Albums."
October 23, 2018: I've written a sequel to this post, "10 More Essential Dave Brubeck Albums."
Hey Mark'
ReplyDeleteI nominated your blog for an award. If you can, head on over to my site to see what I've written about you and to accept!
Cheers
https://the80sdidntsuck.wordpress.com
Hey Ian, thanks so much! Sorry I didn't respond sooner, I've been busy training for a new job! I always appreciate your shout outs!
ReplyDeleteDAVE DIGS DISNEY... I was a freshman in high school (late 50s and early 60s) when I was introduced to the Dave Brubeck Quartet via an album "DAVE DIGS DISNEY". I loved it then and still love it. I listen to it often, on a CD. Each arrangement is a sincere work of musical art. Although they're all gone, except for Gene Wright, Brubeck's quartet will continue to leave a musical statement for a very long time. DAVE DIGS DISNEY is one of my picks to be in the top ten, because if that album/CD is a person's first experience with JAZZ, that person will feel it's affect for a long time.
ReplyDeleteResearching Dave Brubeck at the moment as part of book project. Very helpful blog, thank you.
ReplyDelete