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Sonny Rollins: Jazz colossus

Sonny Rollins began teaching himself the alto saxophone in 1942, switching to the tenor saxophone four years later. By the late 1940s, he had already become a recognized figure in the New York jazz scene and appeared on numerous recordings with leading bebop musicians between 1949 and 1954. His breakthrough came in 1955 through his collaboration with the Clifford Brown and Max Roach Quintet. After Brown’s death, Rollins continued performing with various ensembles. From 1959 to 1961, he withdrew from the jazz world for more than two years. Upon returning, he resumed playing hard bop while also exploring freer, less structured forms of improvisation, notably in partnership with trumpeter Don Cherry. Following another creative hiatus from 1969 to 1971, Rollins performed with a wide range of ensembles–often featuring lesser‑known musicians–and expanded his stylistic reach from hard bop to fusion. In 1972, he received a Guggenheim Fellowship, which he used to compose a concerto for tenor saxophone and orchestra that premiered in 1986. He subsequently toured throughout the United States, Europe, and Japan.

Cover art for the 1957 release Saxophone colossus.

Alongside Charlie Parker, Miles Davis, and John Coltrane, Rollins is regarded as one of the central figures in modern jazz improvisation. His sound helped define the hard bop approach to the saxophone, characterized by exceptional technical command, expansive imagination, and a deeper engagement with the harmonic, melodic, and rhythmic possibilities of modern jazz. Drawing from Ben Webster, Coleman Hawkins, and Dexter Gordon, Rollins shaped his full, resonant tone with extraordinary flexibility, employing staccato articulation, the subtle swallowing of notes, and a wide range of vibrato effects.

The style Rollins developed in the 1960s was a deliberate move away from the formulaic melodic patterns common in modern jazz at the time, replacing them with an improvisational stream of consciousness that emerged from thematic material. Rollins’s style featured a multifaceted rhythmic approach that juxtaposed fast, sharply articulated melodic lines with subtle micro-rhythmic deviations–playing ahead of or behind the beat–alongside the variation of small rhythmic cells and the purposeful use of silence. His repertoire extended beyond standard jazz tunes and blues forms to include thematic material from popular culture, such as film music, as well as a number of original compositions, some even written in the calypso idiom.

A 1968 performance in Denmark.

Despite his iconic status, Rollins never considered himself one of the greats of modern jazz. Speaking about his legacy in a 2021 interview, Rollins revealed, “No, I don’t consider myself to be one of [greats]. I’m a very self-effacing person. You know, the thing is with music, you never get to the place you want to get. And until I had to stop playing some years ago, I was always practicing, I was always trying to get better, I was always trying to get to that next level. And I never got there! Sometimes I felt like I was getting there, but it was sort of an elusive dream somewhat. I don’t want to think of myself as one of anything. I do, of course, think that my music will inspire people, maybe even some up-and-coming musicians in some kind of way.”

This according to an entry on Sonny (Walter Theodore) Rollins by Martin Pfleiderer in MGG Online.

Sonny Rollins passed away on 25 May 2026 in Woodstock, New York.

Below is a short promotional documentary for the 2020 release of Rollins in Holland: The 1967 studio & live recordings, by Resonance Records in collaboration with the Nederlands Jazz Archief.

Related posts in Bibliolore:

https://bibliolore.org/2020/09/07/sonny-rollins-and-thematic-improvisation/

https://bibliolore.org/2024/09/04/lester-young-saxophone-giant/

https://bibliolore.org/2024/12/12/benny-golson-jazz-composer-and-saxophonist/

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Benny Golson, jazz composer and saxophonist

One of Benny Golson’s earliest memories as a child was being taken to Minton’s Playhouse in Harlem, a now-legendary site of the earliest bop jam sessions, and seeing the house band play with Thelonious Monk, Joe Guy and Kenny Clarke. “I was 11 and didn’t know what the heck it was all about,” he admitted. “But Sugar Ray Robinson was there and my uncle [a bartender at the Playhouse] introduced me to him.” From 1947 to 1950, Golson studied music at Howard University in Washington, D.C., where he began composing and arranging music while playing in a big band. There, he met pianist and composer Tadd Dameron, whose style of composition and arrangement he admired. In 1953, briefly performing with Clifford Brown in Dameron’s band, Golson joined Lionel Hampton’s orchestra, where he met future collaborators Art Farmer and Quincy Jones.

Golson performs with Art Blakey & the Jazz Messengers in 1958.

From 1954 to 1956, he played in Earl Bostic’s band while also gaining recognition as a composer. One of his early compositions, Stablemates, was performed by the legendary Miles Davis Quintet (featuring John Coltrane, whom Golson knew as a boy while growing up in Philadelphia) in 1955 and recorded on The New Miles Davis Quintet album. Golson then joined Dizzy Gillespie’s orchestra in 1956, where he worked as both a composer and arranger. He toured South America with the band, which disbanded in early 1958. Golson was then invited by Art Blakey to become the tenor saxophone soloist and musical director of the Jazz Messengers. During his tenure with the band, he composed iconic pieces such as I remember Clifford, Whisper not, Blues march, and Along came Betty, helping propel the ensemble to prominence within the hard bop movement. Golson himself regarded his time with Blakey’s Jazz Messengers as the peak of his compositional achievements.

In 1959 he studied composition with Henry Brandt and founded the Jazztet together with trumpeter Art Farmer, which initially existed until 1962. For this ensemble, Golson composed and arranged a three-part wind section, including the hit song Killer Joe. The years 1956 to 1962 were the high point in Golson’s jazz career, and in 1963 he stopped playing music for several years. After further studies with Brandt, who also worked as a film composer, Golson received composition commissions in Europe, where he worked mainly from 1964 to 1966.

After moving to Hollywood in 1967, Golson wrote music for numerous films and television shows such as Mission: Impossible and M*A*S*H. From 1975 onwards, he was sporadically active as a tenor saxophonist, but only ambitiously from 1982, the year the Jazztet was re-founded with Farmer. The ensemble, which was again very successful, performed in Japan and Europe in 1982 and undertook a tour of Southeast Asia in 1987, where Golson was commissioned to compose music for the Bangkok Symphony Orchestra. His work Two faces for symphony orchestra was premiered in New York in 1992. In 1994, Golson won the Guggenheim Fellowship for Composers. He has also worked as a lecturer at several universities and colleges since the 1980s.

Golson’s playing has been characterized by a warm tone and melodious lines. Discussing his composition style in a 2009 interview with Downbeat, Golson said “What gives a composition validity is the knowledge of the person writing it, the experience he can draw on. But when you get to the meat of it, it’s in the intervals, what follows what. That’s what a melody is. When I write my songs, I’m conscious of intervals . . . You get the right intervals in place and you’ve got something that will live past your time.”

Golson was inducted into the Jazz Hall of Fame in 2009 and received the Grammy Trustees Award in 2021. His autobiography Whisper not was published in 2016. Benny Golson passed away in New York City on 21 September 2024 at the age of 95.

Read the full entry on Benny Golson, along with his obituary in MGG Online.

Golson performing I remember Clifford on German television in 2014.

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Lester Young, saxophone giant

The tenor saxophonist Lester “Prez” Young grew up in the New Orleans area, where his father led a family band that toured the country with tent shows. Young initially played violin, trumpet, drums, and alto saxophone in the band before switching to tenor saxophone in the late 1920s. He began his professional career in the Midwest, performing with bands such as Walter Page’s Blue Devils in 1930 and Bennie Moten‘s band in 1933, which also featured the young pianist, Bill Basie. In 1934, Young briefly joined the Fletcher Henderson Orchestra as a replacement for the renowned saxophonist Coleman Hawkins. However, his distinctive tone was not well received by the other musicians, leading him to leave the band after a few months and return to Kansas City. There, he played with Andy Kirk and made his first recordings in 1936 with a small group around Count Basie. Young continued to be associated with Basie’s band, with occasional breaks, until 1944.

Cover art for Lester Young Trio album.

Young’s solos on Shoeshine boy and Lady be good quickly became classics, influencing many fellow instrumentalists. In the late 1930s, he also collaborated on numerous studio recordings with singer Billie Holiday. In 1944, Young was drafted into the army, where he was court-martialed for drug possession and served several months in prison. After his discharge, he was signed in 1946 by impresario Norman Granz, who featured him prominently on his Jazz at the Philharmonic tours. During this period, Young led his own bands, typically composed of younger musicians influenced by bebop, and recorded extensively, including notable sessions with pianist Teddy Wilson.

Unfortunately, alcohol and depression, worsened by his military experiences, led to frequent hospitalizations starting in 1955. In January 1959, Young accepted a gig at the Blue Note Club in Paris but returned to New York soon after due to health issues. He died in New York, ultimately succumbing to the effects of alcoholism.

Cover art for album with the Oscar Peterson Trio.

Lester Young significantly influenced cool jazz saxophonists such as Stan Getz, Zoot Sims, and Al Cohn, who drew inspiration from his introspective vocal style and improvisations grounded in motivic details. Even bebop musicians like Charlie Parker were notably influenced by Young’s melodic lines, particularly during the early stages of his career. In one of his recording sessions, Young said, “I don’t like a whole lot of noise . . . trumpets and trombones. I’m looking for something soft. It’s got to be sweetness, man, you dig?”

Find the entry on Lester Young in MGG Online. The photo at the beginning of the post is of Lester Young at the Famous Door in New York City, September 1946.

Listen to Lester Young perform at Birdland in New York City here Live at Birdland | Lester Young (bandcamp.com)

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