Paul Desmond lyrics
Artist · 867 122 listeners per month
Artist's albums
Paul Desmond: The Best of the Complete RCA Victor Recordings
2000 · compilation
Skylark
1973 · album
Falling In Love With Paul Desmond
1999 · album
Greatest Hits Series--Paul Desmond
1998 · compilation
Bossa Antigua
1997 · album
Two Of A Mind
1996 · album
Late Lament
1992 · album
Easy Living
1990 · album
Take Ten
1990 · album
The Best Of Paul Desmond
1972 · compilation
Stardust
1983 · compilation
Dave Brubeck And Paul Desmond
1982 · album
Take Five
2022 · single
Nice People
2021 · album
1975: The Duets
1975 · album
1975: The Duets
1975 · album
Cool Imagination
2002 · album
Desmond Blue
2002 · album
Summertime
1968 · album
Bridge Over Troubled Water
1969 · album
From The Hot Afternoon (Expanded Edition)
1969 · album
Glad To Be Unhappy
1965 · album
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Biography
Paul Desmond is widely recognized for his genius as a melodic improviser and as the benchmark of cool jazz sax players. His warm, elegant tone was one that he admittedly tried to make sound like a dry martini. He and Art Pepper were virtually the only alto players of their generation not directly influenced by Charlie Parker. Desmond was influenced by Lester Young, but took it further, into melodic and harmonic worlds never before traveled by reedmen -- especially in the upper registers. Desmond is best known for his years with the Dave Brubeck Quartet (1959-1967) and his well-known composition "Take Five." He met Brubeck in the late '40s and played with his Octet. The Quartet formed toward the end of 1950 and took final shape with Eugene Wright and Joe Morello a few years later. Jazz at Oberlin and Take Five were considered essential purchases by college students of the era, but Jazz Impressions of Japan was its most innovative recording. Desmond played his loping, slow, ordered, and intricate solos in direct contrast to the pianist's obsession with large chords, creating a myriad of textures for melodic and rhythmic counterpoint unlike any heard in jazz. His witty quotations from musicals, classical pieces, and folk songs were also a watermark of his artistry. When the Quartet split in 1967, Desmond began an intermittent yet satisfying recording career. It included dates with Gerry Mulligan for Verve, various sessions with Jim Hall, and a concert with the the Modern Jazz Quartet. He played his last gigs with the Brubeck Quartet at reunions before dying of lung cancer. Desmond's recordings for RCA have gotten box-set treatment and Mosaic issued one of the complete sessions with Hall. There are also reissues from A&M and CTI, though recordings on Artist House and Finesse remain regrettably out of print. ~ Thom Jurek, Rovi