[JPL] A Reunion of Giants, 50 Years On
r durfee
rdurfee2003 at yahoo.com
Thu Sep 20 15:35:53 EDT 2007
September 20, 2007
Music Review | Sonny Rollins
A Reunion of Giants, 50 Years On
By FRED KAPLAN
Sonny Rollinss concert at Carnegie Hall on Tuesday
night was billed as the 50th anniversary of his first
performance there. More significant, it was the first
time since 1958 nearly a 50th anniversary that
hes played with Roy Haynes. The greatest living tenor
saxophone player, teamed again with arguably the
greatest living drummer now thats historic.
The concerts first half, when the two were joined by
the young bassist Christian McBride, lived up to the
fanfare, in unexpected ways. The high points of Mr.
Rollinss concerts are usually the extended solos:
sinuous improvisations, going on for dozens of
choruses, no two alike, in which he explores every
chord, theme or counterpoint a song seems to offer,
then taps some uncharted crevice and digs or soars on
to blow more. This set wasnt like that. Perhaps
because he was playing with peers (a rarity in recent
decades), he held back, simmered where he usually
boiled, and played as one of three equals.
The unlikely highlight was Some Enchanted Evening,
which Mr. Rollins opened by reciting the melody with
his lush and husky tone, while Mr. Haynes flapped
brushes in triple time, and Mr. McBride plucked whole
notes that anchored the chords without confining his
band mates. When they got to the part where most
musicians take solos, Mr. Rollins instead tossed out a
fragment of the melody, then Mr. Haynes filled in the
rest, and on the interplay went, bar after bar, the
two sometimes overlapping, sometimes not.
It felt like an ambling, elegant conversation between
old friends, which in fact it was. It set off a
goose-bump sensation, a shared intimacy one rarely
encounters in a jazz concert. And the full house gave
it the nights lustiest applause.
For the sets closer, Mack the Knife, Mr. Rollins
drew on a gruffer tone, full of fleet triplets and
arpeggios, but Mr. McBride took the star turn with a
solo that possessed a horns articulate fluency and a
masters insouciant assurance, despite the age gap
that might have marked him as an apprentice. (Hes 35,
while Mr. Rollins is 77 and Mr. Haynes is
unbelievably 82.)
After intermission Mr. Rollins brought out his regular
sextet, which includes electric guitar, electric bass,
trombone, drums and congas (but, alas, no Mr. Haynes
or Mr. McBride). This is a band whose function is to
support the leader, and it performs that task
adequately. But Carnegie Halls acoustics, often
troublesome with amplified music, muddied the works,
and Mr. Rollinss notes were often buried in the mix.
The engineers turned up the volume when Clifton
Andersons trombone started out too low, but didnt
extend the courtesy to the headliner.
Mr. Rollins never broke through the stratosphere.
Still, he played with customary verve, especially
during the two calypsos, when he strutted to the front
of the stage, thrusting his horn to the rhythm while
ripping through the scales, finally uncorking a stream
of thunderous low notes like a foghorn guiding the
way. He does this at the end of nearly all his
concerts, and it never fails to delight.
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/09/20/arts/music/20roll.html?ref=music
Roy Durfee
P.O. Box 40219
Albuquerque, New Mexico 87196-0219
rdurfee2003 at yahoo.com
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