Showing posts with label Russell Malone. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Russell Malone. Show all posts

Thursday, September 16, 2010

On Sitting Down to See Sonny Rollins Once Again: Sonny Rollins @ 80 Concert Review

by John Scherrer

I first saw Sonny Rollins many years ago in Chicago.  I recall the concert vividly.  After Sonny played his first song, uncharacteristically a ballad, the 70-ish year old man seated directly to my left tapped on my shoulder and with a huge grin on his face said, “Isn’t he something?”  That night forever changed how I listen to and conceive music.

On the occasion of Sonny’s 80th birthday, I traveled to my old stomping grounds in New York for the Rollins birthday bash at the Beacon Theatre on Friday, Sept. 10.  Refurbished since I had been there, the Beacon, once a lavish movie theatre and replete with Greek and Egyptian architecture, had last hosted a Sonny Rollins concert in 1995.  Having purchased a ticket in May and knowing the announced guest list of musicians who’d join Sonny on stage—two of whom were “mystery” guests—my expectations were high.

Rollins last played an indoor New York City concert in 2007 at Carnegie Hall, an event marred by a will-call debacle caused by a computer crash that denied entrance to many ticket holders for the most anticipated portion of the concert, a trio set commemorating Sonny’s 1957 Carnegie Hall appearance.  I knew Sonny, having not played a concert in nearly six weeks, would be well rested, and especially anxious to make up for the 2007 gig.

Rollins, accompanied by his current working band (Russell Malone, Bob Cranshaw, Kobie Watkins, Sammy Figueroa), was given a standing ovation before even playing a single note.  Sonny began the festivities with two originals.  If perhaps slow out of the blocks, Sonny found his stride when taking a second solo during the opening “Patañjali.”  He seemed to have infinite permutations for the three-note melody, sometimes coaxing a snake-charmer tone out of his horn.  Whereas “Patañjali” was punctuated by a fierce rhythm, the calypso “Global Warming” was delivered with a buoyant bounce fitting for the celebratory nature of the evening.  Early on, it was clear Sonny had brought his ‘A’ game.

The first special guest of the night was Dakota favorite Roy Hargrove.  Introduced by Rollins as a “chosen one,” Roy recorded with Sonny in 1991 when he was 21 years old—and to my knowledge had not played with him since.  Hargrove, opting for flugelhorn, took the lead on a lovely reading of the Vernon Duke standard “I Can’t Get Started” and was complemented by the jazz contrast of Rollins.

The highlight of the Rollins-Hargrove pairing, though, was Billy Strayhorn’s “Rain Check.”  After Roy and Sonny had traded fours with Watkins, Hargrove attempted to return to the head before Sonny, shuffling briskly across the stage, challenged only by his octogenarian gait, stood up close to Roy and loudly put the brakes on any such closure.  Sonny, showing a sly grin, wasn’t out for blood, but he simply wanted to play.  Rollins and Hargrove started sparring, though friendly and often finishing each other’s thoughts.  One wonders if Sonny had flashbacks to his tragically-brief partnership with Clifford Brown.

After Hargrove left the stage, Rollins brought out master guitarist and former band mate Jim Hall.  Having noticed that Hall’s guitar was out of tune as he played an introduction to “In a Sentimental Mood,” (which would turn into a Hall feature—the only song of the night without a Rollins solo), Sonny, in a display typical of his sense of humor, elicited more than just a chuckle with his drawn-out quote of Chopin’s Funeral March.  Rollins and Hall’s second number was yet another concert highlight: “If Ever I Would Leave You,” a song the pair recorded for RCA in 1962 and one of Sonny’s studio masterpieces.  Rollins and Hall did not make Camelot a silly place, but instead injected a gentle Latin swing (a tad slower than the 1962 version).

With Hall and Sonny’s quintet having departed, Rollins introduced Christian McBride and, filling in one piece of the puzzle, invited the first mystery guest to the stage, fellow legend and jazz’s sharpest dresser, Roy Haynes (a man who cannot possibly be 85).  I got chills when McBride started his introduction of “Solitude.”  The trio, the same that shared the Carnegie Hall stage together in 2007, did not play the Ellington standard as a gentle ballad—ruthless swing would be a better description.  If the concert had ended here, it would have been a smashing success.

But the trio started “Sonnymoon for Two.”  After a couple minutes of meandering, Sonny stepped to the mic and told the crowd that there was a man backstage who was going to sing “Happy Birthday” to him and he had brought his horn.  Anticipation built.  The second mystery guest’s identity had been guarded quite well.  The trio continued to play with all three looking backstage.  A few minutes later, a gentleman in a dark suit with a pork pie hat slowly stepped out and walked towards Sonny.  When I saw a white alto saxophone, I nearly went into shock.  Mystery guest #2 was the patron saint of free jazz, Ornette Coleman, who proceeded straight to Sonny and shook his hand while bowing at the knee out of respect.  The crowd went nuts.

As a friend once said to me, Ornette always plays Ornette—and here was no different.  Coleman took the Rollins blues in a different direction.  Sonny watched intently, sometimes nodding approval and also looking up in thought.  When Sonny took his turn, he played more “out” than he probably had since the 1960s.  If this concert is viewed as a brief retrospective of Sonny’s early years, Ornette was filling in for the late Don Cherry.  All the while, I had never seen so many cell phones pop up at a concert to snap pictures or capture video for posterity.  And at this point, I don’t have much more to say about the meeting of these two icons, their first public performance (?), other than “I was there.”

With the exception of Ornette, all the musicians came back out to play Sonny’s most famous calypso, “St. Thomas.”  This amounted to a victory lap.  Even Sonny, notoriously self-critical, had to know what he had already accomplished.  For nearly two hours, Sonny stood on stage—no intermission and never once sitting down—and did not coast one bit, even though a loving audience would have forgiven the 80-year old man if he had needed a break.  Reflecting on this concert, I’m reminded of what Sonny told Stanley Crouch in a 2005 profile for the New Yorker:
I know what I got from Coleman Hawkins, from Ben Webster, from Dexter Gordon, from Don Byas, from Charlie Parker, and all the other guys who gave their lives to this music.  I know that without a doubt…So now, after all these years, it's pretty clear to me, finally. All I want to do is stand up for them, and for the music, and for what they inspired in me. I'm going to play as long as I can. I want to do that as long as I can pick up that horn and represent this music with honor. That's all it's about, as far as I can see. I don't know anything else, but I know that.
And, thankfully, once more, I had the privilege to stand up and applaud Sonny Rollins, the greatest living jazz musician.

Friday, September 18, 2009

Ten reasons I’m glad to be at the Monterey Jazz Festival

Numbers don’t imply preference or order of importance, they’re just a reminder to stop at 10.

1. Vijay Iyer. Say “VID-jay EYE-ur.” When Ben Ratliff writes “Presto! Here is the new great piano trio,” people notice. I haven’t seen Iyer since he was at the Walker Art Center with Rudresh Mahanthappa in 1996. Monterey may be wishing they had booked him into a larger space than the Coffee House Gallery. With Stephen Crump on bass, Marcus Gilmore on drums. Hoping we’ll hear several cuts from the forthcoming Historicity. Sunday, September 20, 8 p.m. and 9:30 p.m.

2. Buffalo Collision. I’m not joking when I say that if you’re a jazz fan in Minneapolis/St. Paul and you leave town for even a few days, you will miss something you wish you had seen. As I looked ahead to Monterey, I rued missing Buffalo Collision at the Dakota this Friday and Saturday. Somehow they will play the late set there on Saturday (which ends around 1:30 a.m.) and end up in Monterey in time to play the Garden Stage at 5:30 on Sunday afternoon. Ethan Iverson on piano, Dave King on drums, Tim Berne on saxophone, Hank Roberts on cello.

3. The Monterey Jazz Festival All-Stars Featuring Kenny Barron, Regina Carter, Kurt Elling, and Russell Malone. Supergroup! All four of these artists have pleased me immensely in the past—the elegant pianist Barron and adventurous violinist Carter together in Montreal, Malone in various configurations (and in conversation; the angel-faced guitar player tells wicked jokes); vocalist Kurt Elling so many times I should have Platinum Elite status. Jonathan Blake on drums, Kiyoshi Kitagawa on bass. Friday, 9:40 p.m., Arena/Jimmy Lyons Stage; Saturday, 8:00 p.m., Dizzy’s Den.

4. Pete Seeger. Not a jazz artist but let’s all get over it. Like many jazz festivals and clubs, Monterey has broadened its scope (it has long featured blues on Saturday afternoons) and if that helps to keep the gates/doors open I’m all for it. Seeger is an icon. Earlier this week my husband and I met someone who had volunteered at the Haight-Ashbury free clinic in the 60s. He talked about the songs, the protests, the artists, the mood, and the excitement of the times as if they all happened yesterday, with special reference to and affection for Seeger. I’m not a folk fan but I’d be a fool to miss this. I’m expecting at least a mention and perhaps a tribute to Mary Travers of Peter, Paul and Mary, who died on Wednesday.

5. Jason Moran & The Bandwagon Premiering Feedback. Someone (and I can’t remember who—tell me and I’ll correct this immediately) recently wrote about how rock music is finding new life in video games and why can’t jazz do the same? So, why not a video game with Vijay Iyer and Jason Moran as riff-to-the-death piano players? Maybe throw in Robert Glasper and Eldar (whom I missed seeing in Minneapolis earlier this week). Back on topic, I most recently saw Moran at the Dakota with Charles Lloyd, Reuben Rogers, and Eric Harland. For many in the audience, Moran stole the show. Can’t wait to hear his new commission. Thank you, Monterey, for commissioning new work by important artists. 7:00 p.m. Sunday, Arena/Jimmy Lyons Stage. Moran and the Bandwagon also play at 9:00 p.m. on Sunday in the Night Club.

6. Dave Brubeck Quartet Celebrating the 50th Anniversary of Time Out. Has it really been half a century since Brubeck recorded a tune in 5/4 time that is not only instantly recognizable today but still catchy, infectious, and fun? Brubeck has been part of the Monterey festival since the start. Earlier this year, health problems interrupted his touring schedule. People will rise to their feet en masse when he comes on stage on Sunday night at 8:20 p.m. (or thereabouts) in the Arena. It’s going to be a thrilling, memorable moment. I was here for Brubeck's “Cannery Row Suite” premiere in 2006 (with vocalists Kurt Elling and Roberta Gambarini) and it was unforgettable. With Randy Jones on drums, Bobby Militello on alto sax and flute, Michael Moore on bass. Go Dave!

7. Alfredo Rodriguez Trio. Quincy Jones tried and failed to get this young Cuban pianist a visa. In January 2009--earlier this year, not a typo--he defected to the US. A friend saw him at the Detroit Jazz Festival and raved about him. That’s all I know, but it’s enough to put me in the bleachers at the Garden Stage on Sunday at 4:00 p.m.

8. Dee Dee Bridgewater. The lovely, endlessly creative and surprising Dee Dee! Does she still shave her head? Is she still singing Malian music? She’s coming to Minneapolis next year to sing with the Minnesota Orchestra. Does she have another new project for Monterey or will she draw from her extensive and colorful repertoire of French songs, Kurt Weill tunes, straight-ahead, Ella, Ellington, etc.? Not a clue. Saturday night, 9:20 p.m., Arena/Jimmy Lyons Stage; Saturday night, 11:30 p.m., Dizzy’s Den.

9. Toshiko Akiyoshi-Lew Tabackin Quartet. I’ve seen flutist/saxophonist Tabackin at the Artist’s Quarter in St. Paul but never with his wife, pianist/bandleader/composer/arranger/NEA jazz master Akiyoshi. Must stop by the Night Club on Sunday evening at 7:00 p.m. Ack! Same time as Jason Moran's premiere in the Arena! Sometime around 6:30 I'll start gnashing my teeth and wailing.

10. The food, the ambience, the characters. (a) Monterey has good fair food—multi-ethnic, tasty, substantial, prepared in grills and ovens that send clouds of fragrant smoke into the air. This year there’s a salad bar. Heirloom tomatoes? (b) The ambience is laid-back, California-style party. No passing bodies over mosh pits, no fisticuffs or flying F-bombs. It’s genial and courteous, which is not to say it’s fuddy-duddy or boring, just that this is one place where civility apparently still exists and the excitement happens on stage. (c) Hoping the Hat Man (lobster hat, jailbird hat) is still at the Arena gates and Dee Dee Rainbow is feeling well enough to attend this year. She was absent last year and it was a Very Big Deal.

I’m at 10 (and I even fudged 10 a bit) so must quit, but not without mentioning Joe Lovano and Conrad Herwig, Randy Brecker, John Scofield, Wynton Marsalis and the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra, the mind-blowing trio of Chick Corea, Stanley Clarke, and Lenny White (awesome last week at the Dakota in Minneapolis), Esperanza Spalding, the John Patitucci Trio with Lovano and Brian Blade, and DJ Logic, all of whom will be here in the balmy ocean breezes and cool evening mists of Monterey at a jazz festival that has continued without interruption for 52 consecutive years. Times are tough so the festival has taken the unusual step of offering single-show arena tickets for sale; usually you have to buy a package to get a reserved seat in the Arena, where the biggest names perform. Please, people, come.

This year I'll be reporting on the festival for jazz.com and writing a wrap-up for jazzpolice.com when I return home. So you can check those sites over the weekend and into next week if you want to know more.