Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Shanleyonmusic: Honoring Sonny Rollins, missing Sam Rivers


Yesterday, Sonny Rollins was honored about the Kennedy Center Honours show. Just the idea of that is fairly exciting. Naturally I believe ol' Newk is a lot more than deserving of the actual honor, and it's good to understand that others have the same way.

I really like Sonny, as a musician so that as a human becoming. He was among the first interviews Used to do as an intern from InPittsburgh and we talked for around an hour. A couple of years later, he wasn't doing interviews round the time of his appearance in the Pittsburgh Jazz Event. So I faxed him or her some questions. Not just did he answer back each day later, his answers had been very thoughtful as well as looked great in publications.

Bill Cosby do the "induction" talk for Sonny, even though I feel such as Cos has reached the idea in his existence where his shtick results in more like the rambling old man (and also the whole grumpy aged guy act seriously isn't funny), he ended on the note of sincerity which was moving in it's directness. The speech centered on how Cos traveled all over the world, and in remote places just like a dentist's office in Greece along with a rickshaw in Asia, he heard Sonny Rollins' music - which makes it universal. "And this evening, we say, Sonny -- welcome home. " Something regarding those last 2 words carried lots of weight.

For the actual musical part, Joe Lovano as well as Ravi Coltrane used Christian McBride along with a drummer who I can not remember. Then over the stage, out arrived Herbie Hancock, Rick Hall and Jack port DeJohnette, along along with Roy Hargrove, Benny Golson as well as Jimmy Heath. (McBride come up with the film between Cos and the actual performance and he or she probably assembled the actual band, which explains why there have been two drummers but just one bassist. )#) It had been brief and succinct but good.

A lot to my shock, there was absolutely no sign of Wynton Marsalis.

Before the show began, I went on to Facebook and discovered that Sam Rivers died your day after Christmas. Which hurt. Maybe this shouldn't, maybe it had been a selfish, "now I'll never reach meet him" hurt but still, it got in my experience. It's hard sufficient losing a jazz music performer, but losing this type of mover and shaker associated with free jazz, feels a whole lot worse. If I didn't possess the urge to write an evaluation right now, I'd placed on some wild Mike. Maybe I will in route to work.

No comments:

Post a Comment