Posts Tagged ‘Hold music’

Please put me back on hold.

Monday, July 20th, 2009
Timm Schamberger / DDP

Timm Schamberger / DDP

We regularly get people asking us what our hold music is. It isn’t often that people like to be on hold. Since we added Dave Brubeck’s Take Five as our hold music, people have regularly commented on it. Sometimes even asking to be put back on hold so they could hear the rest of the song. The following is a short story on Brubeck’s Take Five album that appeared on NPR.

Dave Brubeck: An Unlikely Hit, 50 Years Strong

All Things Considered, June 12, 2009 – In 1959, jazz pianist Dave Brubeck topped the pop charts and shook up the notion of rhythm in jazz with an odd-metered song called “Take Five.”
Only trained musicians might understand exactly what gave the Paul Desmond-penned song its flow. It was all in the time signature: five beats to the measure, a departure from more traditional four-four time in jazz. It was cutting-edge and cool — a song millions would scoop up and savor. In an interview with Michele Norris, Brubeck explains what made the time signature so difficult.

“You were brought up playing in four-four,” Brubeck says. “Everybody could walk to it and dance to it. Put an extra beat on it — everybody’s tripping.”

Fifty years ago, “Take Five” appeared on Time Out, a title that served as a double-entendre. Those in the know knew it referenced the mood and the music’s meter.

At age 89, Brubeck has slowed down, but he’s still playing and writing music.

“The more you get to play, the better it is — just play as you can while you can,” Brubeck says. “I can’t wait for the next job so we can play.”