Music Review: Dave Brubeck Quartet - Best Of Brubeck 1979-2004
Published October 21, 2006
As a fan of over 45 years I was eager to tackle this particular review, but I found that I had to try to tamp down my memories of the original quartet to a certain extent. I wanted to judge this album on its own merit, rather than try to compare it to those of the legendary original group. Besides, it would be like comparing apples and oranges — or maybe it would be more accurate to say tangerines and oranges. Similar, but possessed of a different shape and flavor.
This 2 CD set on the Concord label is a compilation of songs pulled from Brubeck's many albums, and as the title says, are just the "quartet". (There is one exception — more later about that.) This means that albums from any of Dave's other size groups - or his solo works - were not included.
CD1 is filled with selections from Concord recordings, made from 1979 to 1987 and CD2 contains tunes from Telarc albums, generated from 1993 to 2004. That's a couple of rich veins to mine, and the result is an opportunity to hear what Mr. Brubeck was doing musically in two different periods of his long, outstanding career.
On the first disc, from the earlier period, the personnel performing with Brubeck include his son Chris on bass or trombone, Butch Miles or Randy Jones on drums, and either Jerry Bergonzi on tenor sax or Bill Smith on clarinet. The mix of songs is varied, which is not surprising given the fact that they're pulled from a number of different albums.
The quartet of the late seventies and early eighties had changed a lot from the original group, and nothing illustrated that more clearly than the fact that the lyrical alto sax of Paul Desmond had been mostly replaced by Bergonzi's tenor interpretations, which often showed bebop influences. It starts immediately on the first cut, "Yesterdays", but if you're not a huge fan of bebop don't be discouraged, because the song shifts gears several times. Overall it's a good listen, but I didn't enjoy it quite as much as the next, a delightful song with a calypso beat but a misleading title, called "Symphony". If you are a fan of bebop, try "Dizzy's Dream", which Dave wrote as a tribute to Gillespie, who toured with Dave and
Stan Getz for a while in the eighties.
- Music Review: Dave Brubeck Quartet - Best Of Brubeck 1979-2004
- Published: October 21, 2006
- Type: Review
- Section: Music
- Writer: Big Geez
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Comments
Good write-up, but I can't believe you didn't mention the crickets. I really enjoyed some of the first few tracks because I felt like I was out under the stars.
LOL. You're right, they did include the cricket sounds on cuts from the Concord Jazz Festival. Maybe I didn't appreciate them as much as you because I'm just sort of down on the little critters right now -- they've been especially noisy around my area this year and they've hung on much later than usual.
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The Big Geez is a retiree who takes time off from trimming ear hair to write about music -- sometimes doing conventional reviews, but often just sharing his opinions about how something resonates with his memories and those of his generation. You can read more of his faux pearls of wisdom at the 

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