22,000+ Item Collection Includes Unreleased Music,
Interactive Tour Maps, Song Timelines, Rare Photos, Videos & More
Dave Brubeck & Louis Armstrong (The Brubeck Collection) Credit: Don Hunstein/SONY Records
“Dave Brubeck is the reason I don’t have a ‘day job.’ Jazz changed everything for me and Dave did that! He embodied the quintessential American pioneer spirit.” - Herbie Hancock
“You can’t understand America without understanding jazz, and you can’t understand jazz without understanding Dave Brubeck.” - President Barack Obama
“Dave had rainbows in his pockets. You always felt a little better after any time you met him.” - Wynton Marsalis |
International Jazz Day (April 30, 2024) - Today, one of the world’s premier jazz archives, The Brubeck Collection at Wilton Library (Wilton, CT), announced the launch of its enhanced and interactive digital archive, making the 22,000+ item collection catalog easily searchable and browsable online for the first time to everyone worldwide. This new digital archive also includes more than a thousand digitized photos, recordings, scores, and documents.
This robust collection, established by Dave Brubeck and his wife, Iola, features unreleased music, interactive tour maps, photos, correspondence, concert programs, posters, and song timelines, from the biggest–selling jazz single of all time “Take Five” - which Dave Brubeck Quartet member Paul Desmond composed 65 years ago - to Brubeck’s achievements in the classical world with his prolific compositions which include oratorios, orchestral works, choral pieces, quartets, ballets, and chamber works. Made available on International Jazz Day, this rich resource shares Brubeck’s legacy with musicians, students, researchers, jazz aficionados, and anyone curious about the artist’s broad cultural impact and many dimensions: from his music and family life to his involvement in the 1950s and 60s Civil Rights Movement and beyond. Jazz collections of a comparable scope include Duke Ellington’s at the Smithsonian, Ella Fitzgerald’s at the Library of Congress, and Benny Goodman’s at Yale University.
Explore The Brubeck Collection Here |
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