John Fordham 

Sonny Rollins: Road Shows Vol 3 review – feed your live cravings

As the jazz veteran's health prevents him touring, you'll have to catch his soaring saxophone in thundering form here, writes John Fordham
  
  


The Road Shows series of live recordings of the famously studio-averse Sonny Rollins are all the more appealing now, since health issues are still keeping the 83-year-old sax star from playing live.

Volume 3 draws on gigs in France, Japan and the US from 2001 to 2012, and catches him in such thunderous form as to almost make up for his absence. The fast-walking Biji sparks a tenor-sax solo of vehement exclamations and ferocious low notes, and Someday I'll Find You stirs that signature mix of tenderness, long notes and wayward wriggles through harmony-busting descents. Solo Sonny jams together Miles Davis, Ellington, Glenn Miller, Tennessee Waltz, Oh Susanna and a lot more, while Rollins spends 20 minutes springing animatedly off drummer Steve Jordan's groove on Why Was I Born? and winds things up with Don't Stop the Carnival. He became so brusquely inventive after the millennium that he has sometimes sounded like a free-improviser accidentally parachuted into a straightahead jazz band, but the contrast continues to exert a fascinating charm.

 

Leave a Comment

Required fields are marked *

*

*