|
|
Artist:
Sonny Rollins
Label: Grp Records Category: Music Average customer rating: Media: LP Record Number Of Discs: 1 UPC: 011105016117 EAN: 0011105016117 ASIN: B000003N7N Release Date: 1995-08-15 |
Tracks:
Similar Items:
Customer Reviews:
Sounds like John Coltrane meets King Crimson.......2006-04-01
Missed Opportunity.......2004-06-20
In a passing reference to this title track, in my Amazon review of the Rollins compilation CD in the `Priceless Jazz' series, I was a bit dismissive about the performance, saying that it wastes the talents of the participants and is `rambling, self-indulgent and chaotic'. Listening to it again a few times recently I think I should withdraw at least one of those adjectives, and I find that I dislike it less than I did. It sounds initially as if it is one of Sonny's attempts to engage (maybe with more curiosity than commitment) with the `free jazz' movement that was in vogue at the time. The group seems to be going for the kind of up-tempo performance characteristic of Ornette Coleman's 1960s pianoless quartet (with trumpeter Don Cherry). I remember wondering at the time whether Sonny was in the process of permanently leaving behind the kind of improvisation within traditional harmonic and rhythmic structures on which his musical progress had been based and moving into the kind of `freedom' represented at the time particularly by Coleman, Coltrane, Eric Dolphy and - an even more `far out' player - Albert Ayler. The composition of the album seems to reflect the ambivalence of Sonny's situation: one `experimental' or `avant garde' piece (the title track) seeming to be cautiously trying out a sort of freedom, though within an element of structure, and the two trio pieces closer to traditional forms and procedures.
The title piece begins with a jagged, harmonically ambiguous blues-related theme in Ornette's style, with the sax and trumpet oddly but effectively harmonised together. Although Sonny's first solo begins to exploit the opportunities for harmonic and rhythmic freedom it's not so much `chaotic' as a bit aimless: he seems quickly to run short of ideas, and to be marking time - in a way which is disappointing to hear from the `saxophone colossus' who in the previous decade was a master of logical, structured improvisation. Freddie Hubbard's solo is a more suave, polished contribution. He sounds unintimidated by the semi-`free' setting and is quite conventionally `hard-bop' in approach, in a way which sounds a bit incongruous after Sonny's abstractions, and alongside Elvin's churning polyrhythms.
Elvin sounds to me like the one member of the group who is able to enjoy the tightrope walk between conventional structure and `freedom', maybe partly because it had by this time become his natural territory. He seems to me to be the one who holds this performance together - until the point, after the bass solo, when it enters its most `free' section with Sonny reduced to exploring the squeaks and squeals he can draw out of his mouthpiece. While it's not a pretty noise, there is a moment near the end where it sounds touchingly like the sounds of whales. Incidentally, at the end the opening theme returns very suddenly with pinpoint timing - probably (I suspect) because it was spliced on by the engineers after the performance itself had ground to a halt.
I hope my description does enough to tell you whether it is a track which you want to (a) investigate for yourself or (b) avoid. It would be a pity to avoid the two trio performances because they seem to me to be, in their more conventional way, much better than the title track. I quote here what I said about them in my review of the `Priceless Jazz' album: `This CD performs a particularly valuable service by salvaging the two remaining tracks by the splendid trio of Rollins, Garrison and Jones, and they are so good that you wonder how the opportunity could have been passed up to make a whole album by the trio. "We Kiss in the Shadow" has Rollins playing with an unusual tender romanticism without losing that familiar depth and strength of tone, and " Blessing in Disguise" is an absorbing, exhilarating blues (its five-note theme sounds like an ironic reduction of the rock'n'roll tune, "Be Bop a Lula"), played at a slow walking pace and full of fascinating twists and turns. Garrison and, especially, Jones are in excellent form on both tracks, the drummer providing a rich tapestry of tone-colours and polyrhythms behind the saxophonist and Garrison contributing a good solo to "Blessing in Disguise"'.
I've probably made my recommendation clear: unless you are a Rollins `completist', give this album a miss, read my review of the `Priceless jazz' CD and buy that in preference to this album. Unless, that is, you take the view that anything which includes the mature Elvin Jones is worth having - a view which I entirely understand.
Not quite ..........2003-12-23
Does not fulfil the promise.......2002-12-05
After many listenings, I am somewhat disappointed. The title track has a great groove set up by Jones and Garrison, but Rollins' solo is uninspired. I rarely like long bass or drums solos, and the ones taken here are no exception.
The next two tracks are better, especially "Blessing in disguise" which is a simple blues that features good playing by everyone.
Rollins' masterpieces that I know of are "A night at the Village Vanguard", "saxophone colosuss" and "Way out West". There may be more but this is, at least in my opinion, not one of them. Still, even when not in top form, Rollins is a giant of sound and improvisation.
An Absolute Monster from Rollins and Company!!.......2001-09-02
Music CD:
Music CD
Crystal Pistol ~ Crystal Pistol
Renaissance by Death ~ Betrayal
Valentine Smith ~ Valentine Smith
Music Is the Message ~ Kool & the Gang
Motown Legends: My Guy ~ Mary Wells