CANNERY ROW SUITE (2006)
OVERVIEW
Cannery Row Suite is a multi-media jazz operetta commissioned by the Monterey Jazz Festival in 2006. Dave Brubeck composed a series of songs based on characters from John Steinbeck’s 1945 novel, Cannery Row, about Monterey, California in the 1930s and 1940s. Dave and his wife and long time collaborator, Iola Brubeck, adapted text from Steinbeck’s novel for the Cannery Row Suite.
The Suite was premiered at the 2006 Monterey Jazz Festival and the development of the piece was also a focus of Clint Eastwood’s 2010 documentary film Dave Brubeck: In His Own Sweet Way.
DETAILS
(2006) 40 min.
MUSIC
Dave Brubeck
TEXT
Based on excerpts from John Steinbeck’s novel “Cannery Row”, adapted by Iola and Dave Brubeck.
COMMISSION
Commissioned by the Monterey Jazz Festival in 2006.
PREMIERE
September 17, 2006, 49th Monterey Jazz Festival, Monterey, CA. Thomas Steinbeck, John Steinbeck’s son, narrated the opening and closing.
PURCHASE & LICENSING
For more information contact Derry@BrubeckMusic.com
WATCH & LISTEN NOW
2006 COMMISSION: CANNERY ROW SUITE
EVOLUTION OF A GROOVE SERIES | Monterey Jazz Festival
Join Monterey Jazz Festival’s Artistic Director Tim Jackson, and Dave's son Chris Brubeck, as they remember the 2006 commission of Cannery Row Suite through to the premiere performance and a video from the premiere of Cannery Row Suite, courtesy of Monterey Jazz Festival.
This behind-the-scenes look into the "Cannery Row Suite" commission is Episode 10 of Monterey Jazz Festival's "Evolution of a Groove" Series - "Dave Brubeck, 2006 Commission: Cannery Row Suite". The original debut of this piece is included in its entirety and much of the archival footage has not been seen since the original performance at Monterey. Tickets are required to view the video and it will be available to view throughout 2021.
PROGRAM NOTES
Cannery Row Suite consists of a series of songs based on characters from the John Steinbeck novel about Monterey in the ’30s and ’40s. The character sketches of “Doc,” “Dora” and “Mack” are tied together by a balladeer, who recalls in his verses some of the events in the Steinbeck story. These allusions will be instantly recognized by those familiar with the book, and for those who have not read Cannery Row, I hope it will impel them to do so. They will be rewarded as I was upon revisiting a story l loved when I first read it in 1946.
The voice you hear at the opening of our piece is that of Thom Steinbeck reading the words of his father’s first paragraph of the novel. The music I wrote for the balladeer and the Palace Flophouse gang has a bunkhouse simplicity. In contrast, I employed a 12-tone row for Dora’s theme and Doc’s ending soliloquy. This parallels Steinbeck’s philosophically sophisticated writing about ordinary, extraordinary people.
I recognized so much of my own life from this period before World War II. Upon reading the biography by Jay Parini, I also discovered that Steinbeck and I had much in common. Both of us were born in small Northern California towns—he in Salinas in 1902, and I in Concord in 1920. These towns were surrounded by ranches, farms and orchards and as young men both of us worked on these ranches and came to know the characters and stories of the hired hands, the drifters, seasonal workers and vaqueros. Steinbeck’s grandparents lived on a ranch near King City, where my father used to buy cattle. Both of us had ambitious mothers who wanted the best for their sons in education, social esteem and profession. We both rebelled from such pressures.
Although I never met John Steinbeck, I discovered that we had several mutual friends. My wife Iola and I visited the set of East of Eden when it was being filmed because two of our friends were in the movie. The actor Burgess Meredith, who starred in the film version of Steinbeck’s Of Mice and Men, often came into clubs where I was working and we became quite friendly. In the ‘60s after I had moved East, as Steinbeck had done more than a decade before, I became friends with Xenia Cage, artist and former wife of composer John Cage, who was part of the Steinbeck inner circle that hung out at night in Ed Rickett’s lab. After the composition was completed, I learned from Thom that his father loved jazz and that the Dave Brubeck Quartet was often on his turntable.
From the moment Iola and I began this project I heard harmonica as an instrument evocative of the Cannery Row I remembered from my visits to Monterey when I was growing up. Thom revealed that his dad loved to play the harmonica—not too well, I understand—but it was his musical voice. My father also played harmonica. The first volume of my piano suite includes “Dad Plays the Harmonica.”
All these coincidences and parallels merge toward an understanding of this particular time and place. I hope for a few brief moments tonight we will succeed in conjuring up the memory of “a small and forgotten time” that was Cannery Row in Monterey in California.
— Dave Brubeck
LEARN MORE
THE ORIGINS OF DAVE BRUBECK AT THE MONTEREY JAZZ FESTIVAL
Dave Brubeck played an integral part in the birth of the Monterey Jazz Festival, founded in 1958 by Jimmy Lyons. Throughout the 1950s, Jimmy Lyons, radio personnel and DJ, and Ralph Gleason, jazz critic for the San Francisco Chronicle, developed the idea for a jazz festival in Northern California. Lyons decided that the ideal location for a festival would be at the County Fairgrounds in Monterey, California, and he mustered up local support from civic groups and businesses in order to rally the community in embracing a new haven for culture.
Jimmy enlisted the help of his friend, Dave Brubeck, to sell the idea of a jazz festival to the Monterey City Council by performing together at a city council meeting at the Fairgrounds in 1957. Dave Brubeck said “We played in a whitewashed cement floor place where they showed vegetables, or maybe animals. And the council was sitting there on wooden chairs…they liked it! And that’s how we got permission to do a festival.”
From then on, Dave became a mainstay in Monterey and performed at the festival 15 times over 55 years. Some highlights of Dave's performances in Monterey include: a 40th anniversary concert of “The Real Ambassadors" in 2002; the commission of Dave's “Cannery Row Suite" in 2006; and a 50th anniversary celebration of “Time Out" in 2009, his final appearance at the Festival.
Read more about the Dave’s Cannery Row Suite and his history with the Monterey Jazz Festival here: “Brubeck on Steinbeck” by Jeff Kaliss, Monterey County Weekly.