On September 18, Carnegie Hall was a mob scene, a space so besieged that at curtain call many ticket holders were still jammed into the will-call line. They had come to hear what would happen when tenor saxophonist Sonny Rollins, who had just turned 77, left his comfort zone. Rollins usually plays once a year in New York City, mostly on outdoor stages, where he can blow into the open air. The amplifiers reverberate, the electric bass thuds, the trombone and conga solos often ramble and roll.
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Rollins must have felt the weight of expectations when he received a standing ovation just for showing up. He had made his debut in the room on a bill that included Chet Baker, Ray Charles and Thelonious Monk; the following year, the third-stream composer Gunther Schuller wrote "Sonny Rollins and the Challenge of Thematic Improvisation," in which, with a canonical sweep, he invoked the names Mozart, Rembrandt and Shakespeare to convey how a solo from Saxophone Colossus's "Blue 7" excelled in "thematic and structural unity" while also swinging madly. Structure and improvisation: where Apollo met Dionysus. All eyes in the jazz world were already on Rollins then, but even though critics thought he had reached a pinnacle at the tender age of 28, he just wanted to improve his chops. He also stopped playing "Blue 7."
He soon fled to the Williamsburg Bridge for a two-year sabbatical, where he blew choruses over the East River. When he took those choruses to the public again, at the East Village's Jazz Gallery and on the classic album The Bridge (1962), they were as spectacular as ever. But the jazz world was changing at a frenzied pace, and critical buzz, as always, was fickle. Rollins's thematic improvisation gave way to Coltrane's "sheets of sound," and by the end of the '60s, Rollins would embark on another musical sabbatical and seek enlightenment in India. His recordings from the '50s and '60s are now cherished objects in the age of reissues, but people who saw him perform then insist that he was even more spectacular when the tape decks weren't rolling. To be at the Five Spot at the right time and the right place was a jazz fetishist's very heaven.
More recent Rollins performances have had their own revelations. One night in 2000, on the second set of a gig at B.B. King's Blues Club in Manhattan, he was playing an up-tempo version of Irving Berlin's "They Say It's Wonderful." At one point, the conga and piano dropped out, and an already strong performance became incendiary. Once Rollins had only bass and drums behind him, all the splendors Schuller venerated in print in 1958 were present onstage: the tone was enormous, thick, emotive, raw, swinging and alive. It seemed like it could go on forever. Last year at Lincoln Center's Damrosch Park, after he'd bid the audience farewell following a pedestrian performance, Rollins unleashed a cadenza that brought him to a point beyond euphoria, and people who had gotten up to leave stood and gawked. When we weren't expecting the sublime, we got it--and that was the point. When the moment is right, Rollins can cover the harmonic and rhythmic stratosphere like an entire orchestra.
But Rollins's Carnegie Hall reprise was a high-stakes event that didn't afford time for serendipitous discovery. Before the applause had even died down, the trio ripped into "Sonnymoon for Two," but the tune's blues, in B flat on A Night at the Village Vanguard and from the 1957 Carnegie gig, was transposed to E flat. Rollins didn't want to go over the same chords again; he revisited a format he hadn't played for years, but he wanted to take it someplace new. Quotations came pouring in--strands of "When the Saints Come Marching In" and "Mary Had a Little Lamb" were woven together with growls and grunts. The South Pacific aria "Some Enchanted Evening" had some enchanted moments. In the absence of amplifiers, Rollins's tone was brought down to a stage whisper, and when Christian McBride played a densely layered, peripatetic solo, Sonny would emerge with one-note splashes just subtle enough to fill in the space with plaintive brass. He leaned on Richard Rodgers's melody, sometimes with gruff emphasis, sometimes with poignant vibrato. When he stated the song's closing intonation--"Once you have found her,/Never let her go"--he didn't want to let go of the phrase, repeating it like a mantra as Haynes rumbled on the cymbals. When Rollins leapt to the cadenza at the end of "Moritat"--at turns plaintive and honking--the terminus of Brecht and Weill's gleeful ditty about a serial killer became a search to reclaim territory at the scene of a youthful triumph. Rollins, who had done so much to bring the lower notes into the harmonic vocabulary of the tenor saxophone, was leaning on the higher end of the scale, striving upward. There were many pleasures in the set, but they were delicate and subtle.
Critics being critics, we found ourselves milling around the Carnegie Hall bar after the first set to debate what it all meant. How was Sonny's tone? Were the melodic ideas sufficiently developed? How could the music possibly live up to the mountain of expectations? For twenty minutes, he had half a century of jazz to live up to. As we were looking to Sonny for some sort of deliverance, I was reminded of his reply, in last month's Vanity Fair Proust Questionnaire, when he was asked what living person he most admired: "Maybe my plumber."
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