Drummer Dan Brubeck
Honors His Parents' Music
(& Debuts on CD as a Leader)
With "Celebrating the Music and Lyrics
of Dave & Iola Brubeck,"
To Be Released by Blue Forest Records
April 28
2-CD Set Was Recorded August 2013
Live at the Cellar, Vancouver, BC
With Brubeck's Quartet:
Saxophonist Steve Kaldestad,
Pianist Tony Foster, & Bassist/Vocalist Adam Thomas
April 8, 2015
"Some of these songs
could be classified as 'standards,'" he notes, "but most people have
never heard them with Iola's lyrics. Many of these songs have rarely
been heard at all."
"In Your Sweet Way"
is the track that opens the album, and as with many of the pieces that
follow, Iola wrote the lyrics specifically for a jazz legend (Carmen
McRae). Iola, who died last year at the age of 90, contributed incisive
insider commentary about the songs for the album's liner notes. Dave
Brubeck passed in 2012 at the age of 91.
The opportunity to
pursue the project arose unexpectedly with some of the finest jazz
players in the Vancouver, BC area, including saxophonist Steve Kaldestad, pianist Tony Foster, and bassist/vocalist Adam Thomas. "These are the guys who had good chemistry and we stuck together," says Brubeck, 59, a longtime resident of British Columbia.
Brubeck made the
serendipitous discovery that his bassist was the perfect vocalist for
this material. "He was completely in tune," Dan says of hearing Thomas's
singing for the first time, "phrasing beautifully with a soulful
sweetness, all while swinging his ass off on bass. When the
quartet had a gig we just set up mics in the Cellar, which is tiny and
intimate. I was just amazed when I listened back to what we got."
Thomas's most
impressive feat is the easygoing authority he brings to interpreting
songs the Brubecks created with Louis Armstrong in mind. He swings
joyfully on "Since Love Had Its Way," and wrings every wistful drop from the masterpiece "Summer Song,"
an intoxicating draught of song that has unaccountably remained
uncovered until this year (both songs were introduced by Satchmo in the
Brubecks' politically astute jazz musical The Real Ambassadors). Adding to the poignancy of "Summer Song" is the fact that the chorus serves as Dave and Iola's epitaph.
"I don't think
anyone's done it besides Louis until now," Dan says. "For them that song
had a lot of special meaning. I think Carmen was supposed to sing it
but Louis heard it and that was that."
The quartet doesn't avoid the best-known numbers, offering memorable versions of the oft-interpreted "Blue Rondo a la Turk" and Paul Desmond and Iola Brubeck's enduring hit "Take Five."
But digging deep into the catalog yields one unexpected gem after
another. Thomas hits just the right plaintive tone on the minor blues "Lord, Lord," a piece from Brubeck's suite The Gates of Justice. And "Strange Meadowlark" is another superlative piece that, like "Summer Song,"
could easily become a standard (it's got a good start with recordings
by Carmen McRae, Frederica von Stade, and Hilary Cole).
Dan continues to perform and record with his siblings -- Chris Brubeck, a bassist, trombonist, and noted composer, in the Brubeck Brothers Quartet, and pianist/composer Darius Brubeck in Brubecks Play Brubeck -- when he's not playing with his Vancouver band.
Photo of Dan Brubeck by Colbert Photography
hudba@sbcglobal.net
510/234-8781