Customer Review(s)
Customer Rating: 



Summary: A Guilty Pleasure
Comment: As the title of my review states, I consider this Cd to be kind of a "guilty pleasure." I mean just look at a photo of ol' Dave. Miles he ain't.
And the time signature experiments and almost mathematical structuring of the music isn't exactly soulful. We're talkin' polar opposite of A Love Supreme here.
Yet, I can't help it, I put this one on late at night when I'm all alone and I (gasp!) rock me some Dave Brubeck Quartet.
Parts of this album can certainly feel like Jazz Lite, but it's also at least melodically pleasing and at times truly original. Even to this day.
Though it's been used as bumper music, movie soundtrack, commercial accompaniment, etc., it still sounds just fine as a stand alone document of a time when Rock n' Roll was just gonna be a dying fad and Jazz was "hip" and intellectual and not pumped into climate controlled coffee houses.
So there we have it. I've just "come out" to the world. I like Dave Brubeck. I'm such a nerd.
Customer Rating: 



Summary: The Album That Put Dave Brubeck On The Map
Comment: Dave Brubeck Quartet's "Time Out" is a classic jazz recording and anyone who appreciates jazz needs this gem in their collection.
The year 1959 proved to a big year for jazz having produced many of the genre's most important releases like Miles Davis' "Kind Of Blue," Charles Mingus' "Mingus Ah Um," Bill Evans' "Portrait In Jazz," and John Coltrane's "Giant Steps." This year also proved that the Dave Brubeck Quartet were force to be reckoned with.
Employing odd time signatures and ethnic timbres not widely used in jazz at the time, "Time Out" proved to be a groundbreaking success. To Columbia Record's surprise "Time Out" spawned a hit single "Take Five" and it was ranked #2 on the Billboard charts.
All of the elements that made this group great are in place on "Time Out," but it is my strong opinion that they made plenty of records that were just as good as this one. I would challenge anyone who's interested in this quartet to explore his other work with Paul Desmond. You will quite surprised.
This is a classic album that is without a doubt recommended, not just by me, but the other 171 people who gave it 5-stars.