Take Five is the title of a successful jazz tune by the Dave Brubeck Quartet. It was recorded in 1959 by Paul Desmond for the album Time Out, released that year, at CBS 30th Street Studio in New York City.
French horn - Isabelle Roelofs
Tuba - Daniel Ridder
Arrangement - Dan Turcanu - Just for Horns
https://youtu.be/1B3fsb4thJ4
Take Five for Horn and Tuba Ensemble
-
- Posts: 450
- Joined: Sun Aug 23, 2020 1:49 pm
- Has thanked: 328 times
- Been thanked: 598 times
- Contact:
Take Five for Horn and Tuba Ensemble
- These users thanked the author Kontrabasstuba for the post (total 3):
- MN_TimTuba (Tue Jun 21, 2022 9:25 am) • hrender (Tue Jun 21, 2022 10:56 am) • jtm (Tue Jun 21, 2022 11:14 am)
-
- Posts: 343
- Joined: Fri Aug 14, 2020 7:03 am
- Has thanked: 116 times
- Been thanked: 93 times
Re: Take Five for Horn and Tuba Ensemble
Anytime you post a recording, there's always "that guy" who is going to ask for the sheet music.Kontrabasstuba wrote: ↑Tue Jun 21, 2022 8:20 am Take Five is the title of a successful jazz tune by the Dave Brubeck Quartet. It was recorded in 1959 by Paul Desmond for the album Time Out, released that year, at CBS 30th Street Studio in New York City.
French horn - Isabelle Roelofs
Tuba - Daniel Ridder
Arrangement - Dan Turcanu - Just for Horns
https://youtu.be/1B3fsb4thJ4
Is the sheet music available?
Very nice recording, by the way.
- These users thanked the author bone-a-phone for the post:
- Kontrabasstuba (Tue Jun 21, 2022 12:10 pm)
- bloke
- Mid South Music
- Posts: 19319
- Joined: Thu Aug 13, 2020 8:55 am
- Location: western Tennessee - near Memphis
- Has thanked: 3852 times
- Been thanked: 4101 times
Re: Take Five for Horn and Tuba Ensemble
interesting/unusual...
Back in my high-school guitar-playing days (again: in the 70's, $35 playing nylon-stringed guitar for a cocktail party was way better than $1.65/hr. for drying off cars at a car wash), I was fascinated with that l.p. ("Time Out", which was not new - actually released well over a decade earlier) and taught myself two or three of the tunes (those that seemed as though they would work out on guitar). ...I did a bunch of "pull-offs" and "hammer-ons" with the nylon strings (on "Blue Rondo" - even though they are not considered to be part of "classic" guitar technique.
A friend and I played a piano-guitar version of that ("Take Five") at (probably...??) some sort of high school fund raiser (LOL...NO $35 - gratis - ...and probably a "spaghetti supper"), and I'm thinking we also played "Blue Rondo à la Turk". (Most everything else was either light pops, movie themes, or - what I mostly liked playing - "bossa nova" stuff.)
Back in my high-school guitar-playing days (again: in the 70's, $35 playing nylon-stringed guitar for a cocktail party was way better than $1.65/hr. for drying off cars at a car wash), I was fascinated with that l.p. ("Time Out", which was not new - actually released well over a decade earlier) and taught myself two or three of the tunes (those that seemed as though they would work out on guitar). ...I did a bunch of "pull-offs" and "hammer-ons" with the nylon strings (on "Blue Rondo" - even though they are not considered to be part of "classic" guitar technique.
A friend and I played a piano-guitar version of that ("Take Five") at (probably...??) some sort of high school fund raiser (LOL...NO $35 - gratis - ...and probably a "spaghetti supper"), and I'm thinking we also played "Blue Rondo à la Turk". (Most everything else was either light pops, movie themes, or - what I mostly liked playing - "bossa nova" stuff.)
Last edited by bloke on Tue Jun 21, 2022 1:08 pm, edited 2 times in total.
- These users thanked the author bloke for the post:
- Kontrabasstuba (Tue Jun 21, 2022 12:10 pm)