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Jazz: Red Hot and Cool
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Jazz: Red Hot and Cool
Current price: $19.99
Barnes and Noble
Jazz: Red Hot and Cool
Current price: $19.99
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Recorded during three different stays at New York's
Basin Street
,
Jazz: Red, Hot and Cool
is making its first appearance in the U.S. on CD. It documents -- with the addition of two additional performances that were previously unissued -- the original
Brubeck
quartet in its final years. In 1956
Joe Morello
would replace
Joe Dodge
, and in 1958
Eugene Wright
would take over the bass chair from
Bob Bates
. What strikes the listener about this band, is a having been seasoned for five years when the first of these performances were recorded, the
quartet was far more immersed in the
blues
than anyone -- at least the critics of the time -- had given them credit for.
Paul Desmond
's alto tone had yet to take on the dry martini velvety texture that became his trademark, and
was not yet inserting the totality of his classical ideas about the extrapolation of dissonance from consonance and its resulting harmonic theory that was built on an elaborate contrapuntal system. These ideas, that were introduced to him by the French composer and instructor
Darius Milhaud
and the music of
Shostakovich
and
Stravinsky
would later result in the wildly inventive tonal identity expressed in his compositions on
Jazz Impressions of Eurasia
Jazz Impressions of New York
, and even
Time Out
. On this set, while
is playing with large augmented chords and without the use of arpeggios, his strident melodic sense keeps him rooted in the American vernacular musically. There is the gorgeous,
post-bop
in
"Lover,"
and the
Gershwin
-esque
balladic
structure employed in
"Little Girl Blue."
Desmond, for his part was a constant, the most
rock
steady part of the band. His solos were the epitome of melodic improvisation even then. His break on
"Fare the Well, Annabelle,"
carries the melody and harmony in its venturing.
, never content to just comp, offers
Desmond
a few additions on the diminished seventh and he goes for them stitching his counterpoint through them, taking the tune's body into an entirely new intervallic mode.
's solo quotes
Mozart
's
"Eine Kleine Nacht Musik,"
Pachelbel
"Canon,"
and variations on a
classical
theme from the Orient -- Korea, in fact, which was provocative, given the time. The beautiful reading given here of
"Love Walked In"
is worthy of note because it features the band at its most intimate, hunkered down inside the tune's melody, reworking it to close it off even more from undue influence while re-creating its harmonic architecture. And then there's
"The Duke,"
offered to
Gil Evans
, a simple stroll through the
with a nod to both
Rogers & Hart
. As the band launches into
"Indiana"
the classic quartet flourish becomes evident; the rhythm section keeps it all steady no matter what happens, and, in
's solo, crossing rhythmic patterns, full time signatures, and meter at lightning speed, this was no mean feat. The two added performances
"Taking a Chance on Love"
"Closing Time Blues"
were recorded a month after the previous four in August of 1955. Both of them display
's now trademark two-part counterpoint and
's "in flight" manner of response. They are worthy additions to a record that was already wonderful for its inspiration and the way in which it displayed the band's innovative energy that was unique to live situations. ~ Thom Jurek
Basin Street
,
Jazz: Red, Hot and Cool
is making its first appearance in the U.S. on CD. It documents -- with the addition of two additional performances that were previously unissued -- the original
Brubeck
quartet in its final years. In 1956
Joe Morello
would replace
Joe Dodge
, and in 1958
Eugene Wright
would take over the bass chair from
Bob Bates
. What strikes the listener about this band, is a having been seasoned for five years when the first of these performances were recorded, the
quartet was far more immersed in the
blues
than anyone -- at least the critics of the time -- had given them credit for.
Paul Desmond
's alto tone had yet to take on the dry martini velvety texture that became his trademark, and
was not yet inserting the totality of his classical ideas about the extrapolation of dissonance from consonance and its resulting harmonic theory that was built on an elaborate contrapuntal system. These ideas, that were introduced to him by the French composer and instructor
Darius Milhaud
and the music of
Shostakovich
and
Stravinsky
would later result in the wildly inventive tonal identity expressed in his compositions on
Jazz Impressions of Eurasia
Jazz Impressions of New York
, and even
Time Out
. On this set, while
is playing with large augmented chords and without the use of arpeggios, his strident melodic sense keeps him rooted in the American vernacular musically. There is the gorgeous,
post-bop
in
"Lover,"
and the
Gershwin
-esque
balladic
structure employed in
"Little Girl Blue."
Desmond, for his part was a constant, the most
rock
steady part of the band. His solos were the epitome of melodic improvisation even then. His break on
"Fare the Well, Annabelle,"
carries the melody and harmony in its venturing.
, never content to just comp, offers
Desmond
a few additions on the diminished seventh and he goes for them stitching his counterpoint through them, taking the tune's body into an entirely new intervallic mode.
's solo quotes
Mozart
's
"Eine Kleine Nacht Musik,"
Pachelbel
"Canon,"
and variations on a
classical
theme from the Orient -- Korea, in fact, which was provocative, given the time. The beautiful reading given here of
"Love Walked In"
is worthy of note because it features the band at its most intimate, hunkered down inside the tune's melody, reworking it to close it off even more from undue influence while re-creating its harmonic architecture. And then there's
"The Duke,"
offered to
Gil Evans
, a simple stroll through the
with a nod to both
Rogers & Hart
. As the band launches into
"Indiana"
the classic quartet flourish becomes evident; the rhythm section keeps it all steady no matter what happens, and, in
's solo, crossing rhythmic patterns, full time signatures, and meter at lightning speed, this was no mean feat. The two added performances
"Taking a Chance on Love"
"Closing Time Blues"
were recorded a month after the previous four in August of 1955. Both of them display
's now trademark two-part counterpoint and
's "in flight" manner of response. They are worthy additions to a record that was already wonderful for its inspiration and the way in which it displayed the band's innovative energy that was unique to live situations. ~ Thom Jurek