for the most part. Sonny Rollins, Aix en Provence 1959 (Royal Jazz RJ 502), recorded a week later at a French nightclub with Kenny Clarke on drums in place of La Roca, contains some truly abstract extended playing from Rollins; the three tracks here (Dizzy Gillespie's "Woody'n You," George Gershwin's "But Not for Me," and Tadd Dameron's "Lady Bird") are each over fifteen and a half minutes long and feature Rollins almost without a break. Rollins plays things that make you gasp in surprise at their daring. This set is for serious jazz fans only, but one no Rollins fan will want to miss. The sound is good, too.
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The Bridge was Rollins's first recording after returning from the self-imposed period of absence that began in 1959. Available on Sonny Rollins - The Quartets Featuring Jim Hall (RCA/Bluebird 5643-2-RB), along with two other 1962 cuts, the album presents a different Rollins, just as brilliant in a different way. His sound is different, more speechlike, and he is more prone to go into the horn's extreme registers, both high and low. He also uses overblowing and other effects to distort his sound. In a year or two, many of his attempts in this direction would begin to sound forced (to my ears, at least), but in 1962 they were still well integrated into an expressive style.
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This set consists of four standards, including "Without a Song" and "God Bless the Child," along with Rollins's adventurous, up-tempo originals "The Bridge" and "John S." The two extra tracks are a samba version of ''If Ever I Would Leave You," and a lighter, bossa-nova-tinged "The Night Has a Thousand Eyes," both of which are lovely. The LP version of this set has several more tracks on it, including the famous calypso "Brownskin Girl." Throughout, Jim Hall's guitar is a sensitive counterpoint to the tenor, and Bob Cranshaw and Ben Riley contribute good background on bass and drums, respectively.
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Another set, All the Things You Are (RCA/Bluebird 2179-2-RB), consists of material recorded in 1963 and 1964, including the famous, or infamous, date pairing Rollins with his hero Coleman Hawkins, one of the weirdest recordings in jazz history. Rollins sounds like he's straining for effect; only Hawkins and bassists Bob Cranshaw and Henry Grimes really deliver the goods consistently in this program of standards like "Yesterdays," "Just Friends," and "All the Things You Are." Six 1964 small-group sides with pianist Herbie Hancock are somewhat better; Rollins plays convincingly on "'Round Midnight," "It Could Happen to You," and Charlie Parker's blues "Now's the Time," but still there is the sense that he is being intentionally, pointlessly, oblique, even perverse in spots. One of the weakest pre-1974 Rollins sets available.
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Rollins's three mid-1960s albums for Impulse - On Impulse! (MCAD-5655
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