Saturday, January 20, 2024

Jazz | Pint | Dave Brubeck Octet

 

Craftwork Brewery
Earlier in the day I was reading a little on the Gerry Mulligan Quartet over at Point of Departure (here and here), and that may have been on my mind when I pulled the Dave Brubeck Octet recording from the pile tonight. Brubeck is not usually one of my go-to artists but the octet is a pretty fascinating recording from sessions in 1946-1950 that I don’t hear getting mentioned all that often. Not sure why really, I guess it’s not that hip to drop Brubeck’s name, but from a writing/arranging angle it’s worth checking out (more so than the soloists even with the presence of a young Paul Desmond). Dated.... yes, but quite different for it’s time too. Pushing ahead in it’s own way with plenty of signs of what would become known as “Cool Jazz” and/or “West Coast Jazz”. Arranging and composing duties are split amongst about half the group (with saxophonist David Van Kriedt contributing the most... although not all the arrangements are credited). And across the 18 tracks I tend to prefer the standards which all get pretty interesting treatments, although “How High The Moon” suffers a bit as it moves through various styles in conjunction with a corny narration. There’s plenty of counterpoint, colourful harmony, and 5/4 even makes an appearance during “What Is This Thing Called Love”. A number of the octet had studied with composer Darius Milhaud and the classical influences come through across the work as a whole and on the original compositions in particular. The original compositions feel a little more forced than the arrangements of the standards, like they are really trying to do something and it comes off more stilted (there’s a bit of that in the standards too). All that said, listening tonight has made me think it’s a shame that Brubeck didn’t use some of that Time Out money to reform the octet but with all that touring, I guess there wouldn’t have been much time to write material. The listening was washed down with Zest saison from Craftwork.

No comments: