Dave Brubeck dead at 91

Obituaries for folks in the entertainment world that have come to the end of the road.

Dave Brubeck dead at 91

Postby radiofan » Wed Dec 05, 2012 10:49 am

Dave Brubeck dies one day shy of his 92nd Birthday
5 December 2012 Last updated at 12:08 ET


Dave Brubeck wrote more than 250 pieces of music, toured concert halls from California to the Far East and performed in front of four US Presidents - a huge workload for someone who, after all, told the rest of us to Take Five.

With his saxophonist Paul Desmond and the rest of the celebrated Quartet, Brubeck was an integral part of the West Coast Cool sound that characterised American jazz throughout the 1950s and '60s.

Their 1959 record Take Five was the first million-selling record in jazz history, and Brubeck its first musician to appear on the cover of Time.

Born in 1920 to a father who became a cattle rancher and a mother with her own concert pianist ambitions, Brubeck never really wanted to be in a band in the first place.

His only ambition, initially, was to be a rancher, working on the family estate in the Californian foothills.

He later started training to become a vet, but his science teacher suggested after a year that he should transfer to the music course.

Classical training only reinforced Brubeck's preference for other musical genres.

Crossing musical boundaries

His tutor Darius Millhaud told him: "If you want to express this country, you will always use the jazz idiom". Brubeck took him at his word and embarked upon a legendary career.

What started life as the Brubeck Trio was soon enhanced by the addition of Paul Desmond on the alto saxophone.

The Quartet were at the forefront of the emerging West Coast Cool Jazz movement, and their appeal to students in particular ensured their crossover into popular music.

Brubeck relied on improvisation and confessed that 90% of the band's tunes were invented as they went along. When Time magazine put Brubeck on its cover in 1954, it called him "the most exciting new jazz artist at work today".

The 1959 Time Out album, a collection of songs with different time signatures, produced Blue Rondo a la Turk and what would become the Quartet's signature tune, Take Five. This summery anthem would ensure the band's permanent position in the jazz canon.

Brubeck continued to work both with his band and on his own. While the Quartet toured extensively and took jazz into new countries, Brubeck crossed musical boundaries and created soundtracks for ballet and theatre.

Scorned by critics

His group finally disbanded in 1967, reuniting in 1976 for a one-off, 25th anniversary tour.

But Brubeck continued to make music, whether it was for ballet, cantatas, classical pieces or Native American-inspired sound, on his own or with any of his three sons, all jazz artists themselves.

He received countless musical awards and was made Duke Ellington Fellow at Yale University. Away from jazz, his music came to rely increasingly on a more prepared composition than the free swing which first made his name.

Brubeck suffered at the hands of musical critics, who poured scorn on his piano-playing technique.

But he referred to himself as in essence "a composer who plays the piano" and, for his massive audiences, the sounds of Dave Brubeck's Quartet defined modern jazz for a generation, and its inspiring leader has left a singular legacy.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-12825163
Those who danced were thought to be quite insane by those who couldn't hear the music.
User avatar
radiofan
Advanced Member
 
Posts: 13756
Joined: Sun Apr 16, 2006 2:24 pm
Location: Keremeos, BC

Re: Dave Brubeck dead at 91

Postby Neumann Sennheiser » Wed Dec 05, 2012 11:13 am

Well, that's about it for the old school. When Oscar Peterson died five years ago that pretty much left only Brubeck remaining of the 1950's jazz icons.
Now who's left?
Benny Golson I suppose; I can't think of anyone else of note.
Pretty sad about hearing this but, at his advanced age, not unexpected.
"You don't know man! I was in radio man! I've seen things you wouldn't believe!"
User avatar
Neumann Sennheiser
Advanced Member
 
Posts: 1129
Joined: Sat Jun 24, 2006 10:43 pm
Location: Port Ludlow, Washington, USA

Re: Dave Brubeck dead at 91

Postby jon » Wed Dec 05, 2012 4:35 pm

Really enjoyed seeing him in October 1979 in Seattle on the old Worlds Fair grounds. One of Dave's son was playing with him in what I recall as a quartet. Presumably not still part of the "one-off, 25th anniversary tour" mentioned in the article as occurring in 1976.

TCM also had an interesting hour or so documentary a few years back, most of it an interview with Dave done in the last 10 years.

Neumann Sennheiser wrote:Well, that's about it for the old school. When Oscar Peterson died five years ago that pretty much left only Brubeck remaining of the 1950's jazz icons.
Now who's left?
Benny Golson I suppose; I can't think of anyone else of note.
Pretty sad about hearing this but, at his advanced age, not unexpected.

I checked on Ray Bryant and he died 18 months ago. Missed that at the time.
User avatar
jon
Advanced Member
 
Posts: 9257
Joined: Mon May 08, 2006 10:15 am
Location: Edmonton

Re: Dave Brubeck dead at 91

Postby Neumann Sennheiser » Thu Dec 06, 2012 7:33 am

Horace Silver, less well-known in the main-stream, but he's in his 80's and still on the right side.
The one good thing that comes out of this, is that people will check out youtube links to Brubeck's Take 5 and Blue Rondo and, youtube being what it is, will lead them inward to Paul Desmond, Chet Baker, etc. and someone who thought they didn't really care about jazz gets to discover something amazing:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gsz3mrnIBd0
"You don't know man! I was in radio man! I've seen things you wouldn't believe!"
User avatar
Neumann Sennheiser
Advanced Member
 
Posts: 1129
Joined: Sat Jun 24, 2006 10:43 pm
Location: Port Ludlow, Washington, USA


Return to The End Of The Road

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 46 guests