Sonnymoon for.....YOU !
This is Sonny on RIVERSIDE in 1957, when as the liners say, he was 
undisputed ruling the DOWNBEAT critic's poll and at the top of his form.
 
 
 
 
I like this album because Sonny hits on some better known standards, but
 turns them into vehicles for his rich imagination as a leader and 
soloist... the tunes are catchy even before his solos (with the opening 
moments of JUST IN TIME bordering on almost weird), but once he starts 
soloing, things swing... majorly...The rhythm section needless to say is
 fitting... Sonny Clark on piano, Percy Heath and Paul Chambers on bass,
 Roy Haynes on drums. Sonny's tricky rhythms have Sonny C. laying out on
 THE LAST TIME I SAW PARIS - - I guess the man from St. Thomas could 
baffle the best ! His playing is energetic, colorful and graceful. It 
seems to engender respect for the material as well as his band mates as 
demonstrated by the seemless manner in which he migrates between varied 
rhythm sections. I especially enjoyed the international "flavor" of 
"Mangoes," an interesting counterpoint to "The Last Time I Saw Paris." 
What I love about this album is that it demonstrates what an engaging 
player Sonny is and was... regardless of the tempo or tune he really 
gets your attention... even before the solos... I also like how he 
clearly states the melodies to the tunes, yet put his own things into 
it. The solos can be very simplistic yet hard driving at the same 
time... at other times, he'll lay a flurry of notes on you... That was 
another strength of his... to play on space and time and do it cleverly,
 yet always deep within the pocket. He was definitely one of the few 
immediate post-Parker players who had his own rhythmic thing going... a 
big fat fluent swingin' sound that makes you pay attention to each and 
every moment... and again, cute and clever ideas for the arrangements, 
showing the reason why he was a LEADER and not a sideman. THIS...is one 
of my favorite albums in jazz ever. If you know me- You know I'm a Sonny
 Clark fan as well."The Sound of Sonny" is Sonny Rollins' first and only
 recording with one of my all-time favorite bop pianists, Sonny Clark. 
Like most Sonny albums from this period, 80% of the material here is 
standards. However, it is a perfect blend of familiar and seldom heard 
standards, up-tempo grooves and touching ballads. Of particular interest
 here is Sonny's first unaccompanied solo recording ("It Could Happen To
 You"). "The Sound Of Sonny" ranks right up there with the best of them.
  
 
 Rollins' performance on this classic from 1957 not only solidified him 
as one of the greatest tenors of his generation, but, along with all of 
the other material from his illustrious fifty plus year career, has 
stood the test of time to make him one of the all-time greatest 
musicians regardless of style. Backed by a duo of legends in bassist Ray
 Brown and drummer Shelly Manne, Rollins cooks from beginning to end. He
 is in prime form, still a relatively unknown tenor when this album came 
out, he plays like a man ahead of his years. Sonny's tone is hard, 
percussive, rasping, and even playful, a full spectrum of colors and 
moods. What makes this a truly great album is that every single note 
Rollins plays is a highlight. His soloing stands up to repeated 
listening and rewards the effort with something new each time through. 
Manne and Brown contribute fantastic performances of their own, matching
 Rollins by producing phenomenal solos of their own.Sonny was in his 
absolute prime when he cut Way Out West. No tennor ever had a better 
tone than "Newk", and that includes some very exclusive company, 
(Coltrane, Getz, Shorter, etc.) The painstaking remastering job here 
brings out the brilliance of his majestic sound. To me Sonny's pharsing 
has always had the same inherent rhythm as the great post-war singers 
like Sinatra and Tony Bennett. Without a single bad note or overstated phrase, Way Out West is some of the best hard-bop you'll ever hear. 
Fortunately Sonny is still going strong and at seventy-something he is 
still producing vital music for us to enjoy.  Even the usually 
aggravating practice of sticking alternate takes behind the originals 
hardly makes a difference. Rollins, Manne, and Brown are so brimming 
with ideas, the longer alternates offer the listener just that much more
 of a good thing. This is one of those albums that needs to be in every 
jazz collection, even the cover photo is a classic. .
 Rollins' performance on this classic from 1957 not only solidified him 
as one of the greatest tenors of his generation, but, along with all of 
the other material from his illustrious fifty plus year career, has 
stood the test of time to make him one of the all-time greatest 
musicians regardless of style. Backed by a duo of legends in bassist Ray
 Brown and drummer Shelly Manne, Rollins cooks from beginning to end. He
 is in prime form, still a relatively unknown tenor when this album came 
out, he plays like a man ahead of his years. Sonny's tone is hard, 
percussive, rasping, and even playful, a full spectrum of colors and 
moods. What makes this a truly great album is that every single note 
Rollins plays is a highlight. His soloing stands up to repeated 
listening and rewards the effort with something new each time through. 
Manne and Brown contribute fantastic performances of their own, matching
 Rollins by producing phenomenal solos of their own.Sonny was in his 
absolute prime when he cut Way Out West. No tennor ever had a better 
tone than "Newk", and that includes some very exclusive company, 
(Coltrane, Getz, Shorter, etc.) The painstaking remastering job here 
brings out the brilliance of his majestic sound. To me Sonny's pharsing 
has always had the same inherent rhythm as the great post-war singers 
like Sinatra and Tony Bennett. Without a single bad note or overstated phrase, Way Out West is some of the best hard-bop you'll ever hear. 
Fortunately Sonny is still going strong and at seventy-something he is 
still producing vital music for us to enjoy.  Even the usually 
aggravating practice of sticking alternate takes behind the originals 
hardly makes a difference. Rollins, Manne, and Brown are so brimming 
with ideas, the longer alternates offer the listener just that much more
 of a good thing. This is one of those albums that needs to be in every 
jazz collection, even the cover photo is a classic. .
 
 
 Rollins' performance on this classic from 1957 not only solidified him 
as one of the greatest tenors of his generation, but, along with all of 
the other material from his illustrious fifty plus year career, has 
stood the test of time to make him one of the all-time greatest 
musicians regardless of style. Backed by a duo of legends in bassist Ray
 Brown and drummer Shelly Manne, Rollins cooks from beginning to end. He
 is in prime form, still a relatively unknown tenor when this album came 
out, he plays like a man ahead of his years. Sonny's tone is hard, 
percussive, rasping, and even playful, a full spectrum of colors and 
moods. What makes this a truly great album is that every single note 
Rollins plays is a highlight. His soloing stands up to repeated 
listening and rewards the effort with something new each time through. 
Manne and Brown contribute fantastic performances of their own, matching
 Rollins by producing phenomenal solos of their own.Sonny was in his 
absolute prime when he cut Way Out West. No tennor ever had a better 
tone than "Newk", and that includes some very exclusive company, 
(Coltrane, Getz, Shorter, etc.) The painstaking remastering job here 
brings out the brilliance of his majestic sound. To me Sonny's pharsing 
has always had the same inherent rhythm as the great post-war singers 
like Sinatra and Tony Bennett. Without a single bad note or overstated phrase, Way Out West is some of the best hard-bop you'll ever hear. 
Fortunately Sonny is still going strong and at seventy-something he is 
still producing vital music for us to enjoy.  Even the usually 
aggravating practice of sticking alternate takes behind the originals 
hardly makes a difference. Rollins, Manne, and Brown are so brimming 
with ideas, the longer alternates offer the listener just that much more
 of a good thing. This is one of those albums that needs to be in every 
jazz collection, even the cover photo is a classic. .
 Rollins' performance on this classic from 1957 not only solidified him 
as one of the greatest tenors of his generation, but, along with all of 
the other material from his illustrious fifty plus year career, has 
stood the test of time to make him one of the all-time greatest 
musicians regardless of style. Backed by a duo of legends in bassist Ray
 Brown and drummer Shelly Manne, Rollins cooks from beginning to end. He
 is in prime form, still a relatively unknown tenor when this album came 
out, he plays like a man ahead of his years. Sonny's tone is hard, 
percussive, rasping, and even playful, a full spectrum of colors and 
moods. What makes this a truly great album is that every single note 
Rollins plays is a highlight. His soloing stands up to repeated 
listening and rewards the effort with something new each time through. 
Manne and Brown contribute fantastic performances of their own, matching
 Rollins by producing phenomenal solos of their own.Sonny was in his 
absolute prime when he cut Way Out West. No tennor ever had a better 
tone than "Newk", and that includes some very exclusive company, 
(Coltrane, Getz, Shorter, etc.) The painstaking remastering job here 
brings out the brilliance of his majestic sound. To me Sonny's pharsing 
has always had the same inherent rhythm as the great post-war singers 
like Sinatra and Tony Bennett. Without a single bad note or overstated phrase, Way Out West is some of the best hard-bop you'll ever hear. 
Fortunately Sonny is still going strong and at seventy-something he is 
still producing vital music for us to enjoy.  Even the usually 
aggravating practice of sticking alternate takes behind the originals 
hardly makes a difference. Rollins, Manne, and Brown are so brimming 
with ideas, the longer alternates offer the listener just that much more
 of a good thing. This is one of those albums that needs to be in every 
jazz collection, even the cover photo is a classic. .
 
 
"Rollins Plays for Bird" is vintage Sonny Rollins -- an album with the 
perfect combination of medium tempo hard boppers and scintillating 
ballads. But unlike other recordings, you get them here all in one song.
 "The Bird Medley" features seven different Charlie Parker songs, all 
strung together intelligently by the band of Sonny, Kenny Dorham, Wade 
Legge, George Morrow and Max Roach. While the medley is album's focal 
point there are two other tracks, the eloquent ballad "I've Grown 
Accustomed to Your Face" and "Kids Know," featuring terrific horn 
interplay by Sonny and Dorham."Rollins Plays for Bird" is vintage Sonny 
Rollins -- an album with the perfect combination of medium tempo hard 
boppers and scintilating ballads. But unlike other recordings, you get 
them here all in one song. "The Bird Medley" features seven diiferent 
Charlie Parker songs, all strung together intelligently by the band of 
Sonny, Kenny Dorham, Wade Legge, George Morrow and Max Roach. While the 
medley is album's focal point there are two other tracks, the eloquent 
ballad "I've Grown Accustomed to Your Face" and "Kids Know," featuring 
terrific horn interplay by Sonny and Dorham. In my review of the 
previous incarnation of this CD, I complained that the "The House I Live
 In" should have been included here to complete this 10/5/56 session. 
STILL....important timeless music.
 
 
 
Rollins was only 20 years old when track 13, I Know, was recorded in January 17, 1951.
Eleven months later, the then 21 year old Rollins was on tracks 5-12 
(Scoops, With a Song in My Heart, Newk's Fadeaway, Time on My Hands, 
This Love of Mine, Shadrack, On a Slow Boat to China, and Mambo Bounce.)
 It is interesting that at 21 he already had a song that contained his 
nickname - Newk - on the album. The first four tracks on the album were 
the last ones recorded (October 7, 1953).I am a big MJQ fan to begin 
with, so having Rollins with the original members - John Lewis, Percy 
Heath, Milt Jackson and Kenny Clarke - is heavenly to me.
I will not bore you with feeble attempts at describing the music (the 
first four tracks) because the sound samples do a far better job than I.
 As a drummer I was particularly interested in Kenny Clarke's playing. 
He is the father of bebop drumming, so paired in this musical setting 
showed aspects of his playing that is not evident in his earlier work, 
not his later work with Bud Powell in Paris.
The bulk of this album - tracks 5 through 12, feature an interesting 
quartet format with the great Kenny Drew on piano, Percy Heath 
apparently borrowed from MJQ for the session, and Art Blakey on drums. 
Art's drumming is pretty subdued considering his explosive technique 
with other ensembles, including his early work with Clifford Brown and 
his career with the Jazz Messengers. The focus is Sonny's tenor and the 
tone is beautiful. When you consider that he was barely 21 when these 
tracks were recorded you have to wonder why he felt so compelled to 
spend a chunk of 1959 practicing on the Williamsburg Bridge eight years 
later.
What I love about the final track is the fact that Miles Davis wrote the
 song and also played piano on it (backed by Percy Heath on bass and Roy
 Haynes on drums with Sonny's beautiful tone coming from that tenor.) I 
remember a story about Dizzy chiding Miles for not using the piano more.
 Apparently that chiding had an effect.
For the life of me I do not understand why it took so long to release 
this album. It was recorded in three sessions between January 1951 and 
October 1953, but was not released until 1956. Regardless of why, the 
long period between completion and release does show that the music was 
still relevant - and this during a time when jazz was rapidly evolving 
in a number of directions. To me the music is as relevant today as it 
was when first recorded. 
These are some Sonny that...should appeal to you....listen and enjoy. 
 



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