Pianist and composer Dave Brubeck won legions of fans over a six-decade career with his complex rhythms and harmonies. His quartet's 'Take Five' was the first million-selling jazz recording.
Don Heckman
5 December 2012
In the strait-laced Eisenhower 1950s, Dave Brubeck seemed, on one hand, deeply conventional. He didn't drink, smoke or take drugs. He favored expressions like "baloney!" and "you bet" over ruder alternatives. He had a prodigious work ethic that had been ground into him by his cowboy father on the family's California cattle ranch.
But rebellion was in Brubeck's soul. Schooled in
piano by his musically gifted mother, he became a jazz man —
outwardly square but quintessentially cool — whose genius at marrying
spontaneity and unorthodox rhythms with classical forms became an enduring
legacy.
The jazz maestro, who had a history of heart trouble, became unresponsive on his way to a medical appointment, said his longtime manager and producer Russell Gloyd. Brubeck's son, who was in the car with him, rushed him to a hospital in Norwalk, Conn., where he was pronounced dead.
Jazz guitarist Kenny Burrell called Brubeck "a true musical giant. He helped to keep jazz at a truly high level and he was very consistent in both his performance and composition."
He was best known for his work with his classic Dave Brubeck Quartet, which included longtime musical partner Paul Desmond on alto saxophone, Eugene Wright on bass and Joe Morello on drums. Brubeck's innovative ideas generated an enthusiastic response from a new audience of young listeners — as well as the players most directly connected with his music.
"When Dave is playing his best, it's a profoundly moving thing to experience, emotionally and intellectually," Desmond said in 1952 in the jazz publication Down Beat. "It's completely free, live improvisation ... the vigor and force of simple jazz, the harmonic complexities of Bartok and Milhaud, the form [and much of the dignity] of Bach and, at times, the lyrical romanticism of Rachmaninoff."
In the late 1950s, the group began exploring
unusual rhythmic meters. By the end of the decade, the album "Time Out" had
reached No. 2 on the pop
music album charts, and a single off the album — with "Take Five" on one side
and "Blue Rondo a la Turk" on the other — became the first jazz recording to
sell more than a million copies.
The group's popularity began to climb in the
mid-1950s when a series of live college recordings — "Jazz Goes to College,"
"Jazz Goes to Junior College" and "Jazz Goes to Oberlin" — was released. Brubeck
appeared on the cover of Time magazine in 1954, only the second such honor for a
jazz artist. (Louis
Armstrong was first.)
But Brubeck's fascination with groundbreaking elements not generally included in the jazz styles of the '50s also made his music a target of widespread disparagement from jazz critics, who often referred to a "heavy-handed, bombastic approach" to piano improvising. The words directly contradicted another critical view, which identified the music of Brubeck and Desmond as another example of the "effete, laid-back, West Coast cool jazz" style."
Most of the criticism failed to recognize the
complex range of elements — from stride piano to a Bach canon — that could
course through a single piece. Brubeck often cited the positive response his
music received from legendary jazz figures including Duke
Ellington, Miles Davis
and Charles
Mingus, among others.
David Warren Brubeck was born Dec. 6, 1920, in Concord, northeast of Oakland.
His father, Howard "Pete" Brubeck, was a cattle rancher, his mother, Elizabeth
Ivey Brubeck, a pianist and music teacher. When he was 11, the family moved to a
45,000-acre ranch near Ione, in the Sierra foothills.His older brothers Howard and Henry became classical musicians, but Dave preferred ranching and improvising pop songs on the piano. As a teenager, he played at dances on weekends.
Brubeck started out studying veterinary medicine
at what is now the University
of the Pacific in Stockton but switched to music at the suggestion of his
science advisor. He managed to earn a bachelor's degree without learning to
properly read music.
His wife, who frequently wrote lyrics for his projects, survives him along with his daughter Catherine, his sons Darius, Chris, Dan and Matthew, 10 grandchildren and four great-grandchildren. Another son, Michael, died several years ago.
Discharged from the military in 1946, Brubeck went to Mills College in Oakland, studying with French composer Darius Milhaud and forming the Brubeck Octet, a musically adventurous group with an imaginative and avant-garde repertoire. Brubeck's trio, which he led from 1949 to 1951, provided a different, more intimate forum for his far-reaching ideas. The group, which included bassist Ron Crotty and drummer/vibist Cal Tjader, played standards and Brubeck's originals.
In 1951, Brubeck added Desmond to his trio. It was the beginning of a journey into national visibility that established Brubeck and Desmond as significant jazz figures. The quartet, which remained together until 1967 and was briefly reunited in 1976, a year before Desmond died, became the most important vehicle for Brubeck's playing and innovative musical ideas.
Brubeck's sometimes empathetic, sometimes confrontational musical partnership with Desmond was the driving force behind those ideas. Brubeck was the engine, his visceral chording providing lift-off power for Desmond's soaring melodic interpretations of Brubeck originals and tunes from the Great American Songbook.
The intimacy of their musical interaction took place as quasi-verbal subtexts within musical dialogues — with the intellectually sardonic Desmond choosing a fragment of melody to identify the title of a popular song or a classical piece, and Brubeck countering it immediately with a continuation of the melody or a contrasting phrase, identifying the title of a different piece.
In a 1961 New Yorker profile, Robert Rice described a typical example that took place during a quartet performance of "Blue Rondo a la Turk" in which Desmond inserted a quote from "Try a Little Tenderness." "Desmond," wrote Rice, responded "with a loud burst from 'You're Driving Me Crazy! – What Did I Do?' "
Despite their sometimes confrontational relationship, Desmond gave Brubeck full credit for coming up with "Take Five."
"At that point, we had three or four albums a year to get done," he told CBC Radio in 1976. "And [Dave] said, 'Why don't we do ... all different time signatures? ... We got 2/4, 3/4 or 4/4, 5/4, 6/4, 7/4, 8/4, whatever. Why don't you take 5/4.' So I wrote 'Take Five.' At the time, I really thought it was kind of a throwaway. But it was Dave's idea, so give him ultimate credit."
In 1967, Brubeck disbanded the quartet to concentrate on composition, primarily sacred works and classical pieces, usually with jazz references. But he was soon pairing frequently with baritone saxophonist Gerry Mulligan as the "The Dave Brubeck Trio with Gerry Mulligan."
After Desmond's death, Brubeck continued to maintain the quartet format with other players, including clarinetist Bill Smith and saxophonist Bobby Militello. Among the many ensembles he led was Two Generations of Brubeck, which included his musician sons Dan, Darius and Chris.
The Dave Brubeck Quartet appeared and recorded
with Leonard
Bernstein and the New York Philharmonic in 1959, entertained world leaders
at the 1988 Gorbachev-Reagan summit in Moscow, and frequently performed at the
White House. Brubeck's 80th birthday was celebrated in 2000, featuring four of
his sons as soloists in an all-Brubeck program with the London Symphony
Orchestra.
Some of the disparagement of his music suggested that racial favoritism was a factor in Brubeck's successes, even though Brubeck was from the beginning a highly visible civil rights activist. One time he refused to appear with the quartet on the "Bell Telephone Hour" television show after he was asked to replace Wright, an African American, with a white bassist.
Among his many awards, Brubeck was inducted into
the American Classical
Music Hall of Fame, declared a Jazz Master by the National Endowment for the
Arts and awarded the National Medal of the Arts. In 2009, he received a lifetime
achievement award as part of the Kennedy
Center Honors.
In his 1995 book, "Cats of Any Color," former Down Beat editor Gene Lees wrote, "The public was right; the critics were wrong."
Times staff writers Elaine Woo and Rebecca Trounson contributed to this report.
http://www.latimes.com/news/obituaries/la-me-dave-brubeck-20121206,0,4002374.story
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