Friday, March 22, 2024

The Dave Brubeck Quartet's Classic "Time Out" LP


Time Out, recorded in 1959 by the Dave Brubeck Quartet, is one of my favorite jazz albums. ("Take Five," the hit jazz tune, is on the album.) I have both the long-play vinyl record and the CD. 

Brubeck in the CD's liner notes said that "[c]reating a 'hit' out of the odd-meter experiments of Time Out was the farthest from any of our minds...when [we] went into the studio to record."

I love the above photo. It appears in the reissued CD's booklet. Paul Desmond, the alto saxophone player as well as the composer of "Take Five," did his own thing by wearing a suit and tie and didn't try to copy what his bandmates wore. He was cool and confident.

Wednesday, March 13, 2024

Philip Payton, The Father Of Black Harlem

Philip Payton, The Father of Black Harlem is a book on my to-read list. It's a biography, by the scholar Kevin McGruder, of the African-American real estate mogul Philip Payton, who played an important role in establishing Harlem as the capital of Black America. Any study of Harlem history must include his name. As a native son of Harlem, I am interested in his story.

Friday, March 8, 2024

Monday, March 4, 2024

The Village Vanguard, A Jazz Mecca


The Village Vanguard, one of New York's storied jazz venues, located on Seventh Avenue South, at 11th Street, in the West Village. Among the musicians who've performed there are Miles Davis (trumpeter), Sonny Rollins (saxophonist), Thelonious Monk (pianist), Carmen McRae (vocalist), Bill Evans (pianist), and Gerry Mulligan (saxophonist).