Pakistani Musicians Play Amazing Version of Dave Brubeck’s Jazz Classic, “Take Five”

(Reprinted from Open Culture)

How’s this for fusion? Here we have The Sachal Studios Orchestra, based in Lahore, Pakistan, playing an innovative cover of “Take Five,” the jazz standard written by Paul Desmond and performed by The Dave Brubeck Quartet in 1959. Before he died last year, Brubeck called it the “most interesting” version he had ever heard. Once you watch the performance above, you’ll know why.

According to The Guardian, The Sachal Studios Orchestra was created by Izzat Majeed, a philanthropist based in London. When Pakistan fell under the dictatorship of General Zia-ul-Haq during the 1980s, Pakistan’s classical music scene fell on hard times. Many musicians were forced into professions they had never imagined — selling clothes, electrical parts, vegetables, etc. Whatever was necessary to get by. Today, many of these musicians have come together in a 60-person orchestra that plays in a state-of-the-art studio, designed partly by Abbey Road sound engineers.

You can purchase their album, Sachal Jazz: Interpretations of Jazz Standards & Bossa Nova, on Amazon and iTunes. It includes versions of “Take Five” and “The Girl from Ipanema.”

Songs You May Have Missed #388

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The Clientele: “Dreams of Leaving” (2007)

The sweetly sad songs of Alasdair MacLean and London quartet The Clientele are achingly beautiful things wrapped in soft textures. MacLean’s vocals combine with subdued acoustic or tremolo guitar and strings for a sound you’d swear the term “dream pop” had been coined to describe. In creating a mood of wistful melancholy this band may have no equal. They also strongly evoke 60’s pop, but it’s damn hard to pin down exactly which 60’s bands their sound is indebted to. Nevertheless, the sound is magical.

See also: https://edcyphers.com/2012/11/15/songs-you-may-have-missed-237/

See also: https://edcyphers.com/2013/10/29/songs-you-may-have-missed-495/

Songs You May Have Missed #387

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ALO: “Dead Still Dance” (2012)

From the fourth full-length release by California’s Animal Liberation Orchestra. It’s an appropriate album-opening track for a groove-heavy pseudo-jam band record.

Drumming Great Bernard Purdie and his ‘Purdie Shuffle’

Bernard Purdie is the most recorded drummer in the world, having played on over 4,000 albums. In the above video he demonstrates the “Purdie Shuffle”, a pattern he came up with as a youngster and inspired by the pushing/pulling dynamics of a train.

We’ve all heard variations of the Purdie Shuffle, even if we didn’t realize it had a name. Bernard himself played it on Steely Dan’s “Home at Last”, from their Aja album:

Jon Bonham employed a variant on Led Zeppelin’s “Fool in the Rain”, from the final album he recorded with the band prior to his death in 1980, In Through the Out Door.

More recently, Death Cab for Cutie used the beat on the song “Grapevine Fires”. In deference to Purdie, Death Cab drummer Jason McGerr resists calling his work on the song a Purdie Shuffle. As he told the New York Times recently: “It doesn’t matter how much I practice, I will never play that shuffle like Purdie. It’s because he has an attitude that seems to come through every time. He always sounds like he’s completely in charge.”

Sounds like a fair approximation to me, though I’ll admit that’s from a non-drummer’s point of view.

And finally, the late, great Jeff Porcaro created his own variant for Toto’s “Rosanna”. Porcaro’s pattern, said to combine the Purdie Shuffle and the Bo Diddley beat, has itself become known as the “Rosanna Shuffle”.

Songs You May Have Missed #386

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Raspberries: “Ecstasy” (1973)

A blast of hormone-fueled power pop by one of the bands that created the template for the genre. Eric Carmen’s image as a sensitive balladeer may predominate as the result of his solo career and hits like “All By Myself”. But those four albums his former band recorded stand as a reminder that he was once a true belter fronting a pretty hard-hitting rock band.

See also: https://edcyphers.com/2012/03/10/songs-you-may-have-missed-43/

See also: https://edcyphers.com/2012/11/17/anatomy-of-a-classic-deconstructing-the-raspberries-go-all-the-way/

Lyric of the Weak: Fatboy Slim, “The Rockefeller Skank”

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