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Take Five

created by Magenta

(thing) by Starrynight (4.9 mon) (print)   ?   (I like it!) 1 C! Thu Jul 06 2000 at 5:35:50

Take Five is so-named because it uses a 5/4 time signature; that is, five quarter notes to every measure. Count it off: one-two-three-four-five one-two-three-four-five. . . it may be easier to think of it in terms of twos and threes: one-two-three one-two one-two-three one-two.

Another well-known song in 5/4 is the Mission: Impossible theme.

Think 5/4's bad? Try 7/8 or 9/8 or. . . ugh. The ability to play odd times well is one of the things that differentiates a good drummer from a mediocre drummer. (Don't even ASK which one I am.)


(idea) by Soujirou (5.2 mon) (print)   ?   (I like it!) 1 C! Sun Dec 17 2000 at 10:50:36

Here is the guitar tab for the song..
Note lengths - (8 = eighth note), (4 = quarter note),
(6= dotted quarter note), (2 = half note), 
(DH = dotted half note)
5/4 time
_A_
-----------|----------------|-----------|----------|-------
-----------|---5------------|-----------|----------|-------
------5-7--|-8---8-7-5------|----4------|----------|-------
----7------|--------------5-|-7----7--5-|-7--5-----|-------
--7--------|------------7---|-----------|------7-5-|-------
-----------|----------------|-----------|----------|-------
  8 8 8 8    8 8 8 8 8  4 4   DH 8 8  4   DH 8 8 4

------------|----------------|----------|----------|------
------------|---5------------|----------|----------|------
--------5-7-|-8---8-7-5------|----4-----|----------|------
------7-----|--------------5-|-7----7-5-|-7--5-----|------
-7--7-------|------------7---|----------|------7-5-|------
------------|----------------|----------|----------|------
 DH 8 8 8 8   8 8 8 8 4  4 4   DH 8 8 4   DH 8 8 4

     _B_  d-      G7        Cj7      A-7
-------|--5-8-5-----------|---7--------------|------------
-------|--------6---5-6-7-|-8----8-5-------5-|------------
-------|----------7-------|----------5-7-8---|------------
-------|------------------|------------------|------------
-7-----|------------------|------------------|------------
-------|------------------|------------------|------------
 2        8 4 8 4 8 8 8 8   8 4  8 4 8 8 8 8

 d-7     G7        Cj7       A7        d-7     G7
---5-------------|-------------------|-5-8-5--------------
-6---6-----------|-5---5-6-8-8-7-8-9-|-------6---5-6-7----
-------7-4-5-6-7-|---8---------------|---------7----------
-----------------|-------------------|--------------------
-----------------|-------------------|--------------------
-----------------|-------------------|--------------------
 8 4 8 4 8 8 8 8   8 8 8 8 4 8 8 8 8   8 4 8 4 8 8 8 8

 Cj7     a-7        d-7                b-7(b5)   E7
---7-------------|----5-------------|----------------------
-8---8-5-------5-|--6---6-----------|----------------------
---------5-7-8---|--------7-4-7-8-6-|--5-------------------
-----------------|------------------|----------------------
-----------------|------------------|----------------------
-----------------|------------------|----------------------
 8 4 8 4 8 8 8 8    8 4 8 4 8 8 8 8    DH

CHORDS:
_A_
-----------------------|-----------------------------|----
----1------1----0---0--|-----------------------------|----
----2------2----0---0--|---------.-/----------------.|----
----2------2----2---2--|----------/-.---------------.|----
-0------0--------------|-----------------------------|----
----------------0---3--|-----------------------------|----

(thing) by Chris-O (2.2 mon) (print)   ?   (I like it!) 1 C! Sat Jul 07 2001 at 20:44:41

Perhaps the most overlooked fact about the song "Take Five" is that it was not written by Dave Brubeck; rather, it was written by the quartet's saxophonist Paul Desmond.

The song was not intended to be a hit in any way. The whole album that the song first appears on, "Time Out", is an experimental foray into odd time signatures (besides the 5/4 of Take Five, there is the alternating 9/8 and 4/4 of Blue Rondo a la Turk, and the 3/4 and 7/8 of much of the rest of the album). In fact, Take Five was originally written as a drum exercise for drummer Joe Morello.

Brubeck himself has little to do in this song, playing a simple vamp of the three basic chords while Desmond and later Morello go to town soloing over this sparse backup.

There is even a break in the song where it switches to 4/4**. It is a tribute to these musicians that this switch, and indeed the awkward timing of this song, seems perfectly natural, even to the Western ear trained to 4/4 and 3/4 as being the "real" time signatures.

An edited version of the song was released as a single, with the drum solo chopped slightly and the piano break that leads into said solo removed. The B-side of the single was "Blue Rondo a la Turk" (mistitled "Blue Rondo a la Tuna" on the jukebox page).

Desmond's thoughts on "Take Five":

At the time I really thought it was kind of a throw-away. I was ready to trade the entire rights, lifetime-wise of "Take Five" for a used Ronson electric razor. And the thing that makes "Take Five" work is the bridge, which we almost didn't use. We really came within ... I shudder to think how close we came to not using that, because I said "Well I got this theme that we could use for a middle part". And Dave said, "Well let's run it through." And that's what made "Take Five".

Take Five was also used as the opening theme to a Playboy or Hugh Hefner televison show in the late 20th century.


And no one has yet mentioned that to "take five" means to take a break, as in "take five minutes off". It's often used to disassemble groups such as actors or musicians. Without this phrase as part of the vernacular, this song would not have had such a catchy title.
** One of my sources claims this, anyway; I listened to the Time Out version of the song several times with a pair of headphones and a pencil to tap out the beat and never found it. I could be wrong, or it could be a different version, like the mangled single version mentioned above.
Sources:

http://www.morewisdom.com/desmond.htm
http://www.sonymusic.com/artists/SoundtrackForACentury/ns4/track/1724.html
http://www.personal.psu.edu/users/s/x/sxh209/reviews2.html


printable version
chaos

5/4 5/4 time Mexican food counting system 7/8
Dave Brubeck Mission: Impossible Thelonious Monk Paul Desmond
time out Boy/girl/other bands and why they're good for real musicians onomatopoeia The Specials
Measuring time by setting fire to various things jazz time signature walk the walk
The NPR 100 Strange Meadow Lark If she were an insect, she'd be a moth in search of a flame literature like acorns
machloket Rock the Casbah DSL is like heroin I Might Be Wrong
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