Thursday, 6 December 2012

Dave Brubeck


We lost one of the greatest jazz pianist 

December 6, 1920 – December 5, 2012
 

When Dave Brubeck, who has died a day short of his 92nd birthday,
played at Ohio’s Oberlin classical music conservatory in 1953,
the young jazz composer and pianist was warned to expect a cold reception.
Instead came a rapturous response.
His experimental musicianship and infectious enthusiasm quickly made him a figurehead of Fifties American cool.

Brubeck was a prolific and adventurous composer who incorporated the fugues
and counterpoint of classical music into ambitious jazz compositions,
investigated non-European scales and experimented with compound time signatures.
And the more adventurous he became, the more success he achieved.
In 1959 he released the platinum-selling album Time Out 
 – tracks included Blue Rondo A La Turk and the evergreen Take Five
and the following year the symphonic Brubeck Plays Bernstein Plays Brubeck.


 


Dave Brubeck: 

A jazz icon who reached a massive audience

 

Dave Brubeck changed the sound of jazz in profound ways, unexpectedly becoming something of a pop star in the process.
Starting in the mid-1950s, in fact, he emerged as a symbol of jazz in America, and well beyond, gracing the cover of Time magazine in 1954 and selling more than a million copies of “Take Five” in 1960. To this day, the puckishly syncopated tune remains one of the most recognizable in jazz, though Brubeck didn’t write it – his alto saxophonist, Paul Desmond, did.
Beneath the popular acclaim stood a brilliant, uncompromising composer-pianist who challenged conventional jazz techniques, brought the music to American college campuses and helped break down racial barriers through a music uniquely suited to that task.


Brubeck was en route to an appointment with his cardiologist when he was stricken Wednesday morning,
said his longtime manager-producer-conductor, Russell Gloyd.
The pianist died of heart failure at Norwalk Hospital, in Norwalk, Conn., near his home in Wilton, Conn.
Brubeck was anticipating a birthday concert Thursday, when he would have turned 92.
The performance will go on, but in the form of a tribute, in Waterbury, Conn.

"Dave Brubeck was one of the giants in the music – he changed the way people listened to the music,”
said David Baker, distinguished professor of music at Indiana University and a friend of the Brubeck family.
read more     here



"Take Five" - 1966

Dave Brubeck - piano
Paul Desmond - alto saxophone
Eugene Wright - bass
Joe Morello - drums





Thanks for all the great music 
and for all the great hours spent listening to it. 
Will never forget you and will still keep listening.






Friday, 30 November 2012

The end of autumn......



.... November Impressions of the Périgord....




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"next door's" villages:

 Allemans



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Lusignac




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St. Jean-de-Cole

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"The morns are meeker than they were,
The nuts are getting brown;
The berry's cheek is plumper,
The rose is out of town.
The maple wears a gayer scarf,
The field a scarlet gown.
Lest I should be old-fashioned,
I'll put a trinket on."

  Emily Dickinson



...November at La Pouyette...


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"I saw old Autumn in the misty morn...

 
Stand shadow less like silence, listening



To silence."
   Thomas Hood, Ode: Autumn, 1827


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...a late 19th Century "fairytale" house....



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For sale
Anybody interested ????





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another one of these Périgordian November days
with a deep blue sky..... 

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bye - bye Fall....



    bye - bye November....




...and

best wishes for a wonderful first December weekend to all of you!





 Until then...............




Tuesday, 6 November 2012

November post - "By Invitation Only"



This month post is about blogging,

in Marsha's words:
Do you remember when you 1st started blogging? 
Remember how much it meant to each of us to have a new follower/friend?
And, 
remember how we would have adored being pointed out to all the blogging world by another blogger, 
a well-read blogger?

Well, here is my little "story":

It all began in Spring 2010 when I discovered Trish's fabulous blog:

 

TROUVAIS ~ French interiors, rough luxe, flea market finds 

 

 
 Image: Trouvais  here 

...and when we both came together 'via peonies'.


Image: Trouvais  here

 Then she wrote a post about me: 


"Peonies in a French Garden"   here

This was the beginning of a lovely friendship!

Because of Trish's encouragement and inspiration I created a few months later my own blog.

Thank you Trish!   here


Image: Trouvais   here


 

 "My good friend Karin from La Pouyette has posts on linen that are incredible  here and  here.
An antique dealer for over 30 years, at times showing at Battersea, 
her blog is full of gardening and antique information. 
She can occasionally be talked out of seriously beautiful linen and other textiles…
like the initialed piece above that I’ve shown you several times."  Trish


Image by Trouvais

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I know that I've neglected to some extend the blog world during the last few months,
slowing down with commenting and posting.
As it is sometimes in life - unexpected things are coming up which are demanding full attention....
But I will certainly try to catch upon with all of you as soon as possible!



A very special THANK YOU
to each and every one of you
for still reading me and for all your friendly comments!
It means a lot to me and certainly so much appreciated.

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Please link to Marsha's blog to read all November posts
from our international blogger group


Splenderosa   here

Best wishes 
and  
A bientôt.....