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Jazz Moods Cool

Jazz Moods Cool  - CD

Label: Columbia Legacy
Year: 2004
Released on LP: No
Released on CD: Yes

Tracks

1. Tonight
2. Some Day My Prince Will Come
3. Strange Meadow Lark
4. The Duke
5. Pennies from Heaven
6. Basin Street Blues
7. Gone With the Wind
8. In Your Own Sweet Way
9. I Feel Pretty
10. Audrey
11. Take Five

Notes

Performers

Dave Brubeck
Paul Desmond
Joe Morello
Eugene Wright
Norman Bates
Joe Dodge
Bob Bates

Reviews

All Music Guide –Review – copyright

As part of the Jazz Moods series from Sony, pianist and composer Dave Brubeck is spotlighted on 11 tracks recorded for the label between 1955 and 1960. These sessions highlight the widely accepted jazz/pop combination achieved through tracks like "Take Five," "Audrey," and "Strange Meadow Lark," along with live versions of "In Your Own Sweet Way" and "The Duke." The pianist, along with the graceful and brilliant alto saxophonist Paul Desmond, employed a winning formula that combined straight-ahead jazz while exploring current trends in popular music, such as the Broadway standards "Some Day My Prince Will Come," "Tonight," and "I Feel Pretty." The one complaint with this compilation is the omission of Brubeck's classic composition "Blue Rondo a la Turk."

Al Campbell

Copyright Rovi Corporation



Review - musicweb-international.com

This is yet another disc in this series of reissues where no real personnel details are included. However, in this case, it is almost enough to say that this is the Dave Brubeck Quartet featuring Paul Desmond as these are the two players who are the major soloists and composers of the numbers which do not fall into the standard category.

Having made this initial point, I must say that this is a very interesting disc, containing as it does such a varied selection of performances. Some of the old favourites such as "Take Five" and "The Duke" are here,along with a good few show tunes and Jazz standbys.

With the passage of time it is becoming clearer that Brubeck's contributions to the music are somewhat more profound than many critics would have led us to believe. Benny Green had an almost pathological dislike of this group and the MJQ. It is now generally accepted that these two bands were amongst the most significant contributors to a style that seemed to bridge the divide between Jazz and Chamber Music. Perhaps it was more difficult in the past to appreciate that just because the performances were often of a more gentle, reflective nature they were nevertheless capable of the same levels of spontaneity.

Paul Desmond was a true original with his understated tone. He always managed to produce a thoughtful and interesting reading on a piece, no matter how hackneyed the tune and played with a subtle and yet powerful sense of swing. Brubeck could have rested his reputation on two compositions alone, "The Duke" and "In Your Own Sweet Way". "Strange Meadow Lark " is another of his superlative pieces. He was perhaps best known for his experiments in unusual time signatures. What is refreshing here is that other than Desmond's "Take Five" the only other odd meters are jazz waltzes.

This disc represents a good introduction to the music of this classic band.


Dick Stafford





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