sábado, 24 de dezembro de 2011

SONNY ROLLINS EAST BROADWAY RUN DOWN

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Sonny Rollins - East Broadway Run Down



Sonny Rollins
East Broadway Run Down
ABC/Impulse! A 9121

Rudy Van Gelder Studio, Englewood Cliffs, NJ, May 9, 1966
Personnel:
Freddie Hubbard (tp*)
Sonny Rollins (ts)
Jimmy Garrison (b)
Elvin Jones (d)

East Broadway Run Down*
Blessing In Disguise
We Kiss In A Shadow
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Tracks
1. East Broadway Run Down (Rollins) 20:27
2. Blessing in Disguise (Rollins) 12:27
3. We Kiss in a Shadow (Hammerstein, Rodgers) 5:40

For Sonny Rollins, the 1960s were a period of consolidation and revolution as he refined his own concepts and reacted to the flurry of events around him. In taking stock of John Coltrane, Ornette Coleman, Albert Ayler and Archie Shepp, Sonny formulated a series of fascinating responses, from the elegant, mainstream approach of THE BRIDGE to his free-form safaris into the underbrush of open-ended group improvisation with Don Cherry (On The Outside).

East Broadway Run Down is the apotheosis of this period, one of Sonny Rollins most powerful recordings. Jimmy Garrison and Elvin Jones (late of Coltrane's band) fire each of these performances with an elemental energy. Meanwhile, the relaxed and extremely confident Sonny responds with some of his most charged improvisations, abstract and exploratory, yet lyrical and supremely bluesy.

The title tune begins with an angular, fragmented blues vamp. As Garrison and Jones lock into a multi-layered 4/4 groove, Rollins sculpts in space, lagging way behind the beat with heraldic recitatives and coy snippets of the theme, teasing Jones into one rhythmic climax after another in the manner of Monk and Lester Young. Freddie Hubbard responds to Rollins' thematic parries with fierce, bluesy counterpunches, and following free solo passages from Garrison and Jones, they proceed with free textural exchanges over a hypnotic rhythm vamp. After this epic romp, Sonny (sans Freddie) jumps headfirst into the ancestral blues figures of "Blessing In Disguise" with garrulous, preaching energy. "We Kiss In A Shadow" (from "The King And I") is among his most touching ballads, moving from a tender Afro-Cuban head to a slow grinding shuffle, as Sonny deconstructs the melody with rhapsodic elan.

Review by Steven McDonald
Around the ten-minute mark of the title track, things get very interesting indeed — moody and spooky as Jimmy Garrison hangs on a single note, making his bass throb along while Elvin Jones widens the space and fires drum and cymbal hits in all directions. Coming off bass and drum solos that never seem to fit anywhere in the piece, it's a supreme moment of tension-building, one that gets repeated after Rollins and trumpeter Freddie Hubbard restate the theme in unison. This is the sound of Rollins' group working in unity. For much of "East Broadway Run Down," though, the rhythm section is off doing their thing, usually together, while Rollins meanders about in limbo, seemingly trying to figure out what it is that he should be doing. That Rollins was having an off day for this recording is a suspicion that's strengthened by Hubbard's part — where Rollins is wandering, Hubbard is charging ahead, focused and tight, fitting with the rhythm section, keeping the tension up. The remainder of the album is more on the mark, with "Blessing in Disguise" being quite enjoyable — it starts out in a cheerfully traditional vein and gradually, subtly, starts to slide off into an improvisational area only to come back again to the traditional, and so back and forth. Rollins floats his sax line around the melody with only occasional excursions toward the outer regions. "We Kiss in a Shadow," though, is charmingly straightforward, a ballad rendering supported by Jones and Garrison locking together on a nice rhythm construction that lets Rollins float around the melody.
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