In June of 1967 I graduated from the Pittsburg State (KS) technical program=
and went to work for Beech Aircraft Corporation in Wichita. I was a count=
ry boy. It would be four months before I would wed the love of my life, Ro=
sie. Evenings were sometimes a little lonely and I ended up in a small bar=
on south Washington street one evening to have a beer. On one of my first =
visits the bartender, attractive but more of a mother-figure, poked a jukeb=
ox button and played one of her favorites.
Up until then I was a rock and roll guy - there was really not much more to=
keep the attention of a guy like me. But when she made that jukebox selec=
tion I heard "Take Five" for the first time and it changed my outlook on mu=
sic forever. Now I listen to most anything - but rap. Even some rap will =
catch my attention if it is not the vulgar, violent stuff. Dave Brubeck st=
arted a music revolution that converted a lot of us into listeners.
God Bless Dave and may he rest in peace.
Ron
On 12/6/2012 10:18 AM, Lew Hodgett wrote:
> "RonB" wrote:
>
>
> In June of 1967 I graduated from the Pittsburg State (KS) technical
> program and went to work for Beech Aircraft Corporation in Wichita. I
> was a country boy. It would be four months before I would wed the
> love of my life, Rosie. Evenings were sometimes a little lonely and I
> ended up in a small bar on south Washington street one evening to have
> a beer. On one of my first visits the bartender, attractive but more
> of a mother-figure, poked a jukebox button and played one of her
> favorites.
>
> Up until then I was a rock and roll guy - there was really not much
> more to keep the attention of a guy like me. But when she made that
> jukebox selection I heard "Take Five" for the first time and it
> changed my outlook on music forever. Now I listen to most anything -
> but rap. Even some rap will catch my attention if it is not the
> vulgar, violent stuff. Dave Brubeck started a music revolution that
> converted a lot of us into listeners.
>
> God Bless Dave and may he rest in peace.
> ----------------------------------------------------------------
> My intro to jazz came in the summer of 1951.
>
> Stan Kenton had an evening weekly program on the radio that summer.
>
> Neal Hefty did the arrangements, Maynard Ferguson on trumpet.
>
> "The Misty Miss Christy", June Christy on vocals followed later by
> Chris Connors.
>
> And don't forget Coni Condoli.
>
> By the time Brubeck and Paul Desmond hit the scene, I had been hooked
> on jazz BIG time.
>
> Never picked up on Rock-N-Roll.
>
> It just couldn't compete with Monk, Ella, Sara, Diana, Joe Williams
> and
> of course while not jazz, "The Chairman of the Board", Sinatra who had
> no equal.
>
> The music wasn't (didn't have to be) played at 100 dB, and the words
> were legible.
>
> Lew
>
>
> amen.
"RonB" wrote:
In June of 1967 I graduated from the Pittsburg State (KS) technical
program and went to work for Beech Aircraft Corporation in Wichita. I
was a country boy. It would be four months before I would wed the
love of my life, Rosie. Evenings were sometimes a little lonely and I
ended up in a small bar on south Washington street one evening to have
a beer. On one of my first visits the bartender, attractive but more
of a mother-figure, poked a jukebox button and played one of her
favorites.
Up until then I was a rock and roll guy - there was really not much
more to keep the attention of a guy like me. But when she made that
jukebox selection I heard "Take Five" for the first time and it
changed my outlook on music forever. Now I listen to most anything -
but rap. Even some rap will catch my attention if it is not the
vulgar, violent stuff. Dave Brubeck started a music revolution that
converted a lot of us into listeners.
God Bless Dave and may he rest in peace.
----------------------------------------------------------------
My intro to jazz came in the summer of 1951.
Stan Kenton had an evening weekly program on the radio that summer.
Neal Hefty did the arrangements, Maynard Ferguson on trumpet.
"The Misty Miss Christy", June Christy on vocals followed later by
Chris Connors.
And don't forget Coni Condoli.
By the time Brubeck and Paul Desmond hit the scene, I had been hooked
on jazz BIG time.
Never picked up on Rock-N-Roll.
It just couldn't compete with Monk, Ella, Sara, Diana, Joe Williams
and
of course while not jazz, "The Chairman of the Board", Sinatra who had
no equal.
The music wasn't (didn't have to be) played at 100 dB, and the words
were legible.
Lew
,
On 12/5/2012 4:15 PM, RonB wrote:
> In June of 1967 I graduated from the Pittsburg State (KS) technical program and went to work for Beech Aircraft Corporation in Wichita. I was a country boy. It would be four months before I would wed the love of my life, Rosie. Evenings were sometimes a little lonely and I ended up in a small bar on south Washington street one evening to have a beer. On one of my first visits the bartender, attractive but more of a mother-figure, poked a jukebox button and played one of her favorites.
>
> Up until then I was a rock and roll guy - there was really not much more to keep the attention of a guy like me. But when she made that jukebox selection I heard "Take Five" for the first time and it changed my outlook on music forever. Now I listen to most anything - but rap. Even some rap will catch my attention if it is not the vulgar, violent stuff. Dave Brubeck started a music revolution that converted a lot of us into listeners.
>
> God Bless Dave and may he rest in peace.
>
> Ron
>
Take five and Kinda Cool are generally considered to be the top jazz
albums of our day.. Yes I will miss him and the percussion.
RonB wrote:
> In June of 1967 I graduated from the Pittsburg State (KS) technical
> program and went to work for Beech Aircraft Corporation in Wichita.
> I was a country boy. It would be four months before I would wed the
> love of my life, Rosie. Evenings were sometimes a little lonely and
> I ended up in a small bar on south Washington street one evening to
> have a beer. On one of my first visits the bartender, attractive but
> more of a mother-figure, poked a jukebox button and played one of her
> favorites.
>
> Up until then I was a rock and roll guy - there was really not much
> more to keep the attention of a guy like me. But when she made that
> jukebox selection I heard "Take Five" for the first time and it
> changed my outlook on music forever. Now I listen to most anything -
> but rap. Even some rap will catch my attention if it is not the
> vulgar, violent stuff. Dave Brubeck started a music revolution that
> converted a lot of us into listeners.
>
> God Bless Dave and may he rest in peace.
>
> Ron
Brubeck is a favorite of mine too. First heard him in 1952 at the Zebra
lounge in Honolulu, solo piano, not yet known.
Much as I like Brubeck though, I gotta give credit where credit is
due...thank Paul Desmond for "Take Five", he wrote it.
http://www.allmusic.com/composition/take-five-mc0002452064
--
dadiOH
____________________________
Winters getting colder? Tired of the rat race?
Maybe just ready for a change? Check it out...
http://www.floridaloghouse.net
RonB wrote the following on 12/5/2012 7:15 PM (ET):
> In June of 1967 I graduated from the Pittsburg State (KS) technical program and went to work for Beech Aircraft Corporation in Wichita. I was a country boy. It would be four months before I would wed the love of my life, Rosie. Evenings were sometimes a little lonely and I ended up in a small bar on south Washington street one evening to have a beer. On one of my first visits the bartender, attractive but more of a mother-figure, poked a jukebox button and played one of her favorites.
>
> Up until then I was a rock and roll guy - there was really not much more to keep the attention of a guy like me. But when she made that jukebox selection I heard "Take Five" for the first time and it changed my outlook on music forever. Now I listen to most anything - but rap. Even some rap will catch my attention if it is not the vulgar, violent stuff. Dave Brubeck started a music revolution that converted a lot of us into listeners.
>
> God Bless Dave and may he rest in peace.
>
> Ron
'Time Out' was the only jazz LP I ever bought.
--
Bill
In Hamptonburgh, NY
In the original Orange County. Est. 1683
To email, remove the double zeros after @
On 12/6/2012 6:31 AM, dadiOH wrote:
> Brubeck is a favorite of mine too. First heard him in 1952 at the Zebra
> lounge in Honolulu, solo piano, not yet known.
>
> Much as I like Brubeck though, I gotta give credit where credit is
> due...thank Paul Desmond for "Take Five", he wrote it.
> http://www.allmusic.com/composition/take-five-mc0002452064
When I was knocking around the wilds of Australia in the early sixties,
seems every pub had a one night a week three piece combo that did five
takes of "Take Five" each night ... only exceeded in the set list by
"Waltzing Matilda".
--
eWoodShop: www.eWoodShop.com
Wood Shop: www.e-WoodShop.net
https://plus.google.com/114902129577517371552/posts
KarlCaillouet@ (the obvious)
RonB <[email protected]> writes:
>I
>Up until then I was a rock and roll guy - there was really not much more to=
> keep the attention of a guy like me. But when she made that jukebox selec=
>tion I heard "Take Five" for the first time and it changed my outlook on mu=
>sic forever. Now I listen to most anything - but rap. Even some rap will =
>catch my attention if it is not the vulgar, violent stuff. Dave Brubeck st=
>arted a music revolution that converted a lot of us into listeners.
>
Still a rock-n-roll guy, but I've seen Dave Brubeck perform more often
than anyone else, by a bunch. Up through 2009, I saw him almost once
a year from 1983 on. Spyro Gyra is probably second on that list, and
Pink Floyd third (Animals (Soldier Field), The Wall (LA), MLOR (LA Sports Arena),
MLOR (LA Colliseum), Division Bell (Oakland Colliseum), Pulse (Oakland) and
Roger Waters 2012 Wall tour (AT&T Park)).
Brubeck was awesome, even in his late 80's; could barely walk to the piano,
but once he sat down, he played like a 20-year-old. And most of those concerts
he had Bill Smith with him on clarinet (who is still with us).
scott