Sonny Rollins: And The Big Brass, Trio and Quintet

Rating: ★★★★

Record and Artist Details

On Impulse!/There Will Never Be Another You

Musicians:

Walter Booker (b)
Billy Higgins (d)
Ray Bryant (p)
Sonny Rollins
Mickey Roker (d)
Bob Cranshaw (b)
Tommy Flanagan (p)

Label:

Impulse!

February/2012

Catalogue Number:

06007 5334723

RecordDate:

17 June and 8 July 1965

Musicians:

Ernie Wilkins (arr)
René Thomas (g)
Gil Coggins (p)
Sonny Rollins
Wendell Marshall (b)
Nat Adderley (c)
Roy Haynes (d)
Billy Byers (tb)
Clark Terry (t)
Henry Grimes (b)
Specs Wright (d)
Don Butterfield (tu)
Dick Katz (p)
Jimmy Cleveland (tb)
Frank Rehak (tb)
Reunald Jones (t)
Ernie Royal (t)
Kenny Dennis (d)

Label:

Fresh Sound

February/2012

Catalogue Number:

FSR-CD649

RecordDate:

10-11 July 1958 and 4 Nov 1957

Live in Munich 1965

Musicians:

Sonny Rollins
Niels-Henning Orsted Pedersen (b)
Alan Dawson (d)

Label:

Domino

February/2012

Catalogue Number:

891215

RecordDate:

29 Oct 1965

While there are perhaps no absolute classics, here is an interesting overview of one of Rollins's best and most prolific periods, spanning the famous “bridge” sabbatical at the start of the 1960s. The 1958 sessions, reissued from the eponymous Metrojazz album, began with Sonny's then regular environment of Grimes and Specs Wright, on three unlikely older pop-songs followed by an a cappella ‘Body And Soul’. (Incidentally, Metrojazz's “Music Inn” tracks included on a previous Verve reissue are now on Fresh Sound's MJQ disc, reviewed in Jazzwise 155). The big band companion, with eight brass arranged by Wilkins and Haynes taking over on drums, has two originals and two further pops in a setting that simultaneously confines and inspires Rollins. The remaining session here is a less reissued quintet (for the Period label) with Jimmy Cleveland and an OK rhythm section, recorded the day after the Night at the Village Vanguard, and has a more straightahead reprise of ‘Sonnymoon For Two’.

Career-wise, in 1965 Rollins joined Impulse! after RCA-Victor, and his first studio date was the uncluttered quartet session with Bryant. All five tracks are pop-songs if you include one of his finest calypsos, ‘Hold ’Em Joe’, and the whole thing goes off like a fire-cracker, partly thanks to Rudy Van Gelder's efforts. But, exactly three weeks before, a similar but slightly longer live set at the Museum of Modern Art had been recorded (also by Van Gelder) with Flanagan and two drummers side by side, which remained unissued until 1978. I remember Sonny being a bit unhappy about There Will Never because, though done under contract and not a bootleg, he had done On Impulse! in order to replace it. But it does capture his unpredictability like few other “official” albums and, though ‘On Green Dolphin Street’ and ‘Three Little Words’ reappear, they're different enough from the studio versions to afford endless comparisons.

The live Domino, previously unissued as far as I can tell, is different again since it comes from a unique George Wein-produced European tour, in which Niels-Henning and Dawson played separately with Bill Evans, Lee Konitz and Rollins. (Part of his Copenhagen and Stockholm sets were on a deleted Magnetic album.) The ‘Dolphin’ resurfaces along with ‘Never Be Another You’ and passing allusions to many others, and the backing duo do well to keep up. This is perhaps not the Rollins to start a collection but, if you're already into him, it's reasonably well recorded and will repay serious study.

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