Dizzy Gillespie With Sonny Stitt and Sonny Rollins - Duets: Sonny Rollins and Sonny Stitt
Facts
| Artist(s) | Dizzy Gillespie With Sonny Stitt and Sonny Rollins |
| Studio | Polygram Records |
| Release Date | October 25, 1990 |
| UPC Code | 042283525320 |
| Buy this item | $14.98 at Amazon.com As of Nov 23 11:42 EST (details) 1 Audio CD, Usually ships in 24 hours, |
About Dizzy Gillespie With Sonny Stitt and Sonny Rollins - Duets: Sonny Rollins and Sonny Stitt
In late 1957, Gillespie recorded with two of the finest tenor players in jazz, Sonny Rollins and Sonny Stitt, both in quintet format with one of the saxophonists and in a sextet with both men present. The meeting of the two Sonnys is available on Sonny Side Up, while this disc includes their separate meetings with Gillespie. The contrast between the saxophonists is still apparent, though, with Rollins bringing blunt authority and invention to Wheatleigh Hall and Stitt providing smooth elegance within the bop conventions. Pianist Ray Bryant can play some of the deepest blues of any modern jazz musician, and he imparts a special feel to the two headless blues with Stitt, "Anythin'" and "Haute Mon'." These are blowing sessions with a special mix of the relaxed and the concentrated, with Gillespie, clearly inspired by his partners, tearing off some of his most incendiary solos of the period. --Stuart Broomer Amazon.com
Tracks
- Wheatleigh Hall
- Sumphin'
- Con Alma
- Con Alma
- Anythin'
- Haute Mon'
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User Reviews
Average user review:| More duels than duets (or trios) but a fearsome symmetry nonetheless. |
This is another Norman Granz Verve session that, more than the Van Gelder Blue Note dates, represents the "language" of the music at its zenith, an invaluable document and perpetually illuminating and scintillating conversation among musical giants--its value far outweighing all of the hard-bop, soul-jazz, funky sessions, Sidewinder formulae that offer little more than something to groove on. This music is the James Joyce of jazz; the other, the Stephen King.
Besides this one and "Sonnyside Up," look for the Diz and Getz duet session. To these three Verve dates, add two more: "Bird and Diz" and "For Musicians Only," the latter with Diz, Stitt and Getz. These five disks comprise a quintessence, a pantheon, a canon of the music at mid-century (arguably the apogee). No amount of thunder and lightning, boosted bass and drums, enhanced instruments, electronic keyboards or distorted pianos can match these meetings, where the artists rely on nothing more than their knowledge of a universal musical grammar to produce all the music on their own.
The 1970s were especially bad times for music and musicians such as these. In fact, many listeners had written off Dizzy and Stitt. How wrong we were. A group of young Swedes started their own label, Sonet, and proceeded to record their jazz heroes, beginning with Dizzy Gillespie. You can hear the results on a 1975 recording, "The Bop Session," featuring Diz and Stitt 20 years later and with a rhythm section of Hank Jones, Max Roach, and Percy Heath. Stitt's sound is as glorious as ever, but again the main man is Gillespie, making us all wonder what we were listening to at the time and why it wasn't Diz. February 10, 2007
| A good jam session |
A good album, if not a great one. Mention should be made of the excellent rhythm section: Ray Bryant on piano, Tommy Bryant on bass, Charli Persip on drums. Of the six tracks, the first two feature Rollins, the last four feature Stitt (who plays tenor throughout except on "Anythin'", where he takes an alto solo). August 12, 2001
| GREAT! |
| Dizzy is spectacular! |
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