Frogtoon Music

Time Out (Album) by Dave Brubeck

Artist Biography For Dave Brubeck

David Warren Brubeck Born December 6 1920 In Concord California - December 5 2012 Was An American Jazz Pianist Who Has Written A Number Of Jazz Standards Including "In Your Own Sweet Way" And "The Duke". He Was Probably Best Known For "Take Five" Written By Saxophone Player Paul Desmond Who Was The Saxophonist In The Dave Brubeck Quartet. Due To The Immense Popularity Of His Work Brubeck Had Won Multiple Awards Such As A Lifetime Achievement Award From The Grammys In 1996 A National Endowment For The Arts Jazz Masters Fellowship In 1999 And A Kennedy Center Honor In 2009. Brubeck's Style Ranged From Refined To Bombastic Reflecting His Mother's Attempts At Classical Training And His Improvisational Skills. Much Of His Music Employed Unusual Time Signatures A Fact Jokingly Referred To By His Greatest Hits Album 'Time Signatures A Career Retrospective'. Upon His Death A Number Of Commentators Noted His Crossover Appeal To Mainstream Pop Audiences Something Putting Him In The Company Of Other Jazz Legends Such As Louis Armstrong And Herbie Hancock Among Others.

HOME DAVE BRUBECK
POPULAR TRACKS MIXES ALBUMS
Video 1 : 50

Frogtoon Music -

Frogtoon Music Album Info: Time Out

Dave Brubeck's Defining Masterpiece Time Out Is One Of The Most Rhythmically Innovative Albums In Jazz History The First To Consciously Explore Time Signatures Outside Of The Standard 4/4 Beat Or 3/4 Waltz Time. It Was A Risky Move -- Brubeck's Record Company Wasn't Keen On Releasing Such An Arty Project And Many Critics Initially Roasted Him For Tampering With Jazz's Rhythmic Foundation. But For Once Public Taste Was More Advanced Than That Of The Critics. Buoyed By A Hit Single In Altoist Paul Desmond's Ubiquitous "Take Five " Time Out Became An Unexpectedly Huge Success And Still Ranks As One Of The Most Popular Jazz Albums Ever. That's A Testament To Brubeck And Desmond's Abilities As Composers Because Time Out Is Full Of Challenges Both Subtle And Overt -- It's Just That They're Not Jarring. Brubeck's Classic "Blue Rondo À La Turk" Blends Jazz With Classical Form And Turkish Folk Rhythms While "Take Five " Despite Its Overexposure Really Is A Masterpiece Listen To How Well Desmond's Solo Phrasing Fits The 5/4 Meter And How Much Joe Morello's Drum Solo Bends Time Without Getting Lost. The Other Selections Are Richly Melodic As Well And Even When The Meters Are Even The Group Sets Up Shifting Polyrhythmic Counterpoints That Nod To African And Eastern Musics. Some Have Come To Disdain Time Out As It's Become Increasingly Synonymous With Upscale Coffeehouse Ambience But As Someone Once Said Of Shakespeare It's Really Very Good In Spite Of The People Who Like It. It Doesn't Just Sound Sophisticated -- It Really Is Sophisticated Music Which Lends Itself To Cerebral Appreciation Yet Never Stops Swinging. Countless Other Musicians Built On Its Pioneering Experiments Yet It's Amazingly Accessible For All Its Advanced Thinking A Rare Feat In Any Art Form. This Belongs In Even The Most Rudimentary Jazz Collection. From Wikipedia - Http //en.Wikipedia.Org/wiki/Time_Out_(album) "Time Out Is A 1959 Album Originally Issued As CS 8192 By The Dave Brubeck Quartet Based Upon The Use Of Time Signatures That Were Unusual For Jazz Mainly Waltz Or Double-Waltz Time But Also 9/8 And Most Famously 5/4 . Although The Album Was Intended As An Experiment Columbia President Goddard Lieberson Was Willing To Chance Releasing It And Received Negative Reviews By Critics Upon Its Release It Became One Of The Best-Known And Biggest-Selling Jazz Albums Reaching Number Two In The U.S. Billboard "Pop Albums" Chart And Produced One Single—Paul Desmond's "Take Five"—that Reached Number Five In The Billboard Adult Contemporary Chart. In 2005 It Was One Of 50 Recordings Chosen That Year By The Library Of Congress To Be Added To The National Recording Registry."