Time In, issued in 1965, was the last of pianist and composer
Dave Brubeck's "Time" recordings, and one of his most musically adventurous. Gone are the moody, silky textures and glissando moves of
Time Out, or
Time Further Out. In fact, of all the "Time" recordings, this is the least commercial and, in places, almost
hard bop-oriented among them. This set goes beyond the entire
West Coast idea as well. That's not to say there are no
ballads -"
"Softly, William, Softly"" is one of the most gorgeous
ballads Brubeck ever composed, with a memorable solo by
Paul Desmond, who plays a slow, bluesy articulation over the pianist's augmented harmonic changes. But there's so much more. The title track has
Stravinsky-esque chords that introduce a delicate theme, which disintegrates into a dissonant
swing. There is also
Brubeck variation on
"Frankie and Johnnie," on
"He Done Her Wrong." This track comes charging out of the box a la the
Ramsey Lewis trio in a fit of pure one-four-five groove, with
Desmond playing ostinato throughout the chorus. And here,
Brubeck shows his love of tradition: Inside his solo, comprised of chords and striated intervallic figures that are just off the harmonic series, he never leaves the original behind; it is always readily evoked at any moment in the tune. The set closes with
"Cassandra," a piece with sleight-of-hand rhythms and fleet soloing by the pianist and
Desmond.
Brubeck himself comes out of the melody with a series of 16th notes that blaze into 32nds before he comes back to the changes for
Desmond. All the while,
Joe Morello is triple-timing the band even in the slower passages just to keep the pulse on target as
Gene Wright and
Brubeck move all around the time figures to create a sense of space around
Desmond's solo. Though it is seldom celebrated as such, this is one of
Brubeck's finest moments on
Columbia. ~ Thom Jurek