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Take Five
By Loren Schoenberg, Conductor and Saxophonist
It is a little difficult to reconcile the term "cool" with the music of the Dave Brubeck Quartet so many of the labels attached to the music ultimately diminish its individuality. To be sure, the leader's forceful and polyrhythmic piano playing was never "cool", but the moniker does make a better fit for the group's alto saxophonist Paul Desmond. Lester Young's influence was felt in virtually all corners of the jazz world in the 1940s and 50s. Players of all instruments and many jazz composers were strongly affected by his music. Desmond's conception came directly out of Young's and one his most profound disciples, saxophonist Lee Konitz.
Desmond was also a composer, and his Take Five, on the 1959 Dave Brubeck Quartet album Time Out, astonished everyone at the time when it became a major hit. It was written in the challenging time signature of 5/4 (albeit grouped into a regular subdivision of 3+2) and was recorded in 1959, when jazz had already been largely supplanted by rock and roll. If anything, it's a tribute to the tune's catchy melody and the off-handed elegance of the performance. Drummer Joe Morello is credited with having devised the basic rhythmic pattern and his drum solo is a classic of restraint and taste.
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