![]() To be released in both mono & stereo at the same time, and their 13th record for Columbia.ĬL 566 - Jazz Goes to College - Dave Brubeck Quartet Featuring Paul Desmond ĬL 590 - Dave Brubeck at Storyville: ĬL 622 - Brubeck Time - Dave Brubeck with Paul Desmond ĬL 699 - Jazz: Red Hot and Cool - Dave Brubeck with Paul Desmond ĬL-878 - Brubeck Plays Brubeck - Dave Brubeck ĬL-932 - Dave Brubeck and Jay & Kai at Newport - Dave Brubeck and Jay & Kai Quintet ĬL-984 - Jazz Impressions of the U.S.A. Since i was looking it up, here's some trivia, Time OUT was the 5th Brubeck album ![]() What a fantastic sounding album.Ĭlick to expand.Yes, i was expanding on the same point. I have several copies, but I consider selling extras and keeping the best sounding 6-eye of both a mono and stereo pressing. ![]() Later copies have "Featuring Take Five" labeled, and add the Columbia Records icon, and stereo icon, and later changed the cat. My TT is in repair at the moment, so can't say for sure, but I'm guessing one is mono, the other stereo.Īs far as covers go, I believe the earliest copies have "Time Out" in blue letters with a red line below it with a pink catalogue # CL 1397 on the cover and blue font on the spine. spaced out a bit further than the other and the titles are spaced slightly differently as well. A steady stream of live and studio recordings followed as the Dave Brubeck Quartet became the most successful jazz act in the United States, and in 1959, they released one of their most ambitious albums yet, Time Out, a collection of numbers written in unconventional time signatures, such as 5/4 and 9/8. On the record labels, I have 2 nearly identical copies but one has the lettering for all titles, etc. 22 1 Dave Brubeck Quartet, Columbia CS 8491 27 GREAT THEMES FROM HIT FILMS 9 Enoch Light ft His Ork, Command RS 835 SD t 40 THROUGH. The lower # & letters are generally the more sought-after pressings. The higher the numbers/further down the alphabet you go the later the pressing. 4B.98.49: Brubeck Festival 2001: Performance: Dave Brubeck Quartet - Brubeck. ( Times are as given on the CD the album numbers differ slightly.Someone please correct me if I'm wrong, but I believe a first pressing Columbia of that era can be identified basically by having "1A" at the end of the matrix. BOX 3: BRUBECKS PERSONAL AUDIO RECORDINGS-Time Out session 1959. Throughout Time Inīrubeck’s compositions bring out the best in Desmond, whose light, airy sound was the musical equivalent of a martini so dry it would have passed inspection by Winston Churchill." Track listing 'Softly, William, Softly' is a deeply expressive ballad, and 'Lonesome' is equally moving. On the ironically-titled opening track, 'Lost Waltz', the group swings with an urgency that reaches its peak during Brubeck’s vigorous solo. With more than two dozen albums behind them by the time this album was recorded, was the foursome a spent force? Definitely not-and, in fact, one listen to Time In will dispel any notions of the quartet as 'polite jazz'. Time In was also one of the final records by a much-loved quartet that included Paul Desmond on alto saxophone. The Absolute Sound's Jeff Wilson wrote: "This 1965 release ended the Dave Brubeck Quartet’s series of time-themed albums, the most famous being 1959’s Time Out, which contained the ever-popular ' Take Five'. The Quartet at a creative peak on a memorable occasion, described by many critics as one of the great live jazz albums of the 1960s. Though it is seldom celebrated as such, this is one of Brubeck's finest moments on Columbia." The Dave Brubeck Quartet at Carnegie Hall (1963) Columbia C2K61455. of all the 'Time' recordings, this is the least commercial. Stylistically, they cover a considerable range, from slow ballads in a West Coast jazz sound, to some of the religiously themed work he began to essay in the later 1960s ( Forty Days, which would later appear in his The Light in the Wilderness: An Oratorio for Today), to more driving bebop-influenced numbers.ĪllMusic's reviewer Thom Jurek wrote that it was "one of his most musically adventurous. Time In is a 1966 studio album by Dave Brubeck, the last of Brubeck's 'Time' series.Īll the compositions on it were written by Dave Brubeck (two co-written with his wife Iola Brubeck), and performed by the Dave Brubeck Quartet. Anything Goes! The Dave Brubeck Quartet Plays Cole Porter
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