Receive Weekly Email and Text Message Updates:
Sign up for latest info on concerts, dining, promotions and more!
Go!
Become a Fan of The Village Voice on Facebook
169 Bar Nyc
• website • view ad
92nd St.y   Tribeca
• website
Al B Entertainment
• website
Bb Kings
• website • view ad
• buy tickets
The Bitter End
• website • view ad
Blender
• website • view ad
Blue Note
• website • view ad
Bowery Ballroom
• website • view ad
Fat Cat/smalls
• website • view ad
Hammerstein Ballroom
• website • view ad
Highline Ballroom
• website • view ad
• buy tickets
Iridium Jazz Club
• website • view ad
• buy tickets
Irving Plaza
• website • view ad
• buy tickets
Knitting Factory
• website • view ad
Le Poison Rouge
• website
Nokia Theatre
• website • view ad
• buy tickets
Pianos
• website • view ad
• buy tickets
Radegast Hall & Biergarten
• website • view ad
Red Lion
• website • view ad
Roseland
• website • view ad
Sounds Of Brazil
• website • view ad
• buy tickets
Southpaw
• website • view ad
• buy tickets
Spike Hill
• website • view ad
Sullivan Hall
• website • view ad
The Bell House
• website
The Studio @ Webster Hall
• website • view ad
Music

Share

  • rss
Music

King of Jazz Benny Is Dead, Long Live King of Jazz Sonny

Gary Giddins

Tuesday, August 19th 2003

If jazz must have a king, the present ruler is Sonny Rollins. In case anyone doubted his eminence, the rainy season abated for his August 9 concert in the Central Park SummerStage series. He appeared without a pianist, not that he needed one. He was on

such a tear that he may not have needed the Afro-percussionist or the trombonist or the bassist or the drummer, though all augmented a rhythmic fury that allowed him to sustain his opening 90-minute set with three tunes. Arithmetically, he went from 4/4 to 3/4 to 2/4; emotionally, he reached higher and higher, with Bob Cranshaw and Steve Jordan never wavering. The first number was a very-good-plus riff that got the blood racing. The waltz was absolutely primo Rollins, an Italian folk song he calls "Italian Folk Song" because he doesn't know the title, and a beautifully gauged performance that shivered with romance.

And the calypso was off the charts. After a good opening solo and a round-robin by the others, Rollins seemed overextended upon his return, and I wondered why he persisted. Then it became clear that he was not going to surrender the piece until he found something worth searching for, and half an hour later he was playing things that for all I know have never been played on the tenor sax. He even manipulated the lever on the gooseneck in his march to a death-defying catharsis and earthshaking final blast. All of which implied that the way to make common cause with current pop is not to hire a rapper, but to embrace pure rhythm. As well as Italian folk songs.

Related Content


Return to "Benny Carter, 1907-2003: A Gentleman You Didn't Mess With" by Gary Giddins

Recent Articles

More by Gary Giddins

Most Popular