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Time Out

Rate It! Avg: 5.0 (140 ratings)
Time Out album cover
01
Blue Rondo à la Turk
6:44
02
Strange Meadow Lark
7:22
03
Take Five
5:24
04
Three To Get Ready
5:24
05
Kathy's Waltz
4:48
06
Everybody's Jumpin'
4:23
07
Pick Up Sticks
4:16
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 7   Total Length: 38:21

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What? You didn't own this in the 60's? Get it now!

60Swing

I listened to this album on my parent's stereo...when stereo was the new thing. Bliss! What we need in eMusic is Time Further Out, which came several years after Time Out. Ah, "Far More Drums" on the stereo at full blast! THAT jazzed up the neighborhood.

user avatar

A MUST HAVE ESSENTIAL ALBUM

jazzmanron

IF YOU DON'T HAVE THIS IN YOUR COLLECTION YOUR MISSING OUT. TAKE FIVE WAS ALSO A HIT ON THE ROCK ROLL CHARTS. TO BAD THE DRUM SOLO WAS CHOPPED FOR AIR PLAY TIME, BUT YOU'LL GET THE FULL VERSION HERE

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They Say All Music Guide

Dave Brubeck’s defining masterpiece, Time Out is one of the most rhythmically innovative albums in jazz history, the first to consciously explore time signatures outside of the standard 4/4 beat or 3/4 waltz time. It was a risky move — Brubeck’s record company wasn’t keen on releasing such an arty project, and many critics initially roasted him for tampering with jazz’s rhythmic foundation. But for once, public taste was more advanced than that of the critics. Buoyed by a hit single in altoist Paul Desmond’s ubiquitous “Take Five,” Time Out became an unexpectedly huge success, and still ranks as one of the most popular jazz albums ever. That’s a testament to Brubeck and Desmond’s abilities as composers, because Time Out is full of challenges both subtle and overt — it’s just that they’re not jarring. Brubeck’s classic “Blue Rondo à la Turk” blends jazz with classical form and Turkish folk rhythms, while “Take Five,” despite its overexposure, really is a masterpiece; listen to how well Desmond’s solo phrasing fits the 5/4 meter, and how much Joe Morello’s drum solo bends time without getting lost. The other selections are richly melodic as well, and even when the meters are even, the group sets up shifting polyrhythmic counterpoints that nod to African and Eastern musics. Some have come to disdain Time Out as it’s become increasingly synonymous with upscale coffeehouse ambience, but as someone once said of Shakespeare, it’s really very good in spite of the people who like it. It doesn’t just sound sophisticated — it really is sophisticated music, which lends itself to cerebral appreciation, yet never stops swinging. Countless other musicians built on its pioneering experiments, yet it’s amazingly accessible for all its advanced thinking, a rare feat in any art form. This belongs in even the most rudimentary jazz collection. – Steve Huey

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