The Prague Post - Sonny Rollins, last jazz 'colossus,' dead at 95

EUR -
AED 4.273981
AFN 72.737362
ALL 95.503954
AMD 428.282121
ANG 2.083699
AOA 1068.349221
ARS 1630.496355
AUD 1.623655
AWG 2.094802
AZN 1.969631
BAM 1.954866
BBD 2.34387
BDT 142.861121
BGN 1.943417
BHD 0.439388
BIF 3457.433038
BMD 1.163779
BND 1.486783
BOB 8.041123
BRL 5.832888
BSD 1.163739
BTN 110.765596
BWP 15.644457
BYN 3.199058
BYR 22810.066386
BZD 2.340472
CAD 1.606719
CDF 2624.320849
CHF 0.91164
CLF 0.02653
CLP 1044.153674
CNY 7.907587
CNH 7.896935
COP 4229.591473
CRC 529.544686
CUC 1.163779
CUP 30.840141
CVE 110.211863
CZK 24.258391
DJF 206.826888
DKK 7.4716
DOP 68.466989
DZD 154.911796
EGP 60.774397
ERN 17.456683
ETB 187.625638
FJD 2.561247
FKP 0.86641
GBP 0.862378
GEL 3.096117
GGP 0.86641
GHS 13.511486
GIP 0.86641
GMD 84.377907
GNF 10199.082628
GTQ 8.873722
GYD 243.472612
HKD 9.1178
HNL 30.961072
HRK 7.535117
HTG 152.386529
HUF 356.82737
IDR 20685.006119
ILS 3.352608
IMP 0.86641
INR 110.853489
IQD 1524.464997
IRR 1540144.992702
ISK 143.599007
JEP 0.86641
JMD 183.412358
JOD 0.825139
JPY 184.989603
KES 150.779066
KGS 101.77211
KHR 4668.749016
KMF 494.606285
KPW 1047.40105
KRW 1761.262393
KWD 0.360015
KYD 0.969832
KZT 550.854412
LAK 25508.70127
LBP 104236.543536
LKR 377.04821
LRD 212.957325
LSL 19.000139
LTL 3.436336
LVL 0.703959
LYD 7.418455
MAD 10.708137
MDL 20.20226
MGA 4889.642514
MKD 61.640503
MMK 2443.465869
MNT 4165.208165
MOP 9.390273
MRU 46.537562
MUR 55.023416
MVR 17.919559
MWK 2017.927079
MXN 20.124821
MYR 4.599954
MZN 74.366362
NAD 19.000139
NGN 1595.482803
NIO 42.82935
NOK 10.763444
NPR 177.224553
NZD 1.986327
OMR 0.44747
PAB 1.163739
PEN 3.963689
PGK 5.077552
PHP 71.543253
PKR 324.010582
PLN 4.231475
PYG 7215.552104
QAR 4.254767
RON 5.237236
RSD 117.410186
RUB 83.150906
RWF 1701.97941
SAR 4.352689
SBD 9.362814
SCR 16.106507
SDG 698.854051
SEK 10.820356
SGD 1.48682
SHP 0.868878
SLE 28.637622
SLL 24403.864035
SOS 665.07934
SRD 43.198358
STD 24087.873513
STN 24.488193
SVC 10.18309
SYP 128.626654
SZL 18.995841
THB 37.869583
TJS 10.712135
TMT 4.073226
TND 3.40186
TOP 2.8021
TRY 53.42001
TTD 7.898192
TWD 36.618296
TZS 3036.398012
UAH 51.536652
UGX 4386.884913
USD 1.163779
UYU 46.477591
UZS 13969.264878
VES 612.392679
VND 30672.556616
VUV 138.314365
WST 3.171062
XAF 655.64089
XAG 0.015005
XAU 0.000256
XCD 3.145171
XCG 2.097289
XDR 0.815645
XOF 655.643706
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.736092
ZAR 18.991588
ZMK 10475.406538
ZMW 21.907438
ZWL 374.73633
  • RELX

    -0.3300

    33.01

    -1%

  • BTI

    -0.3700

    65.36

    -0.57%

  • GSK

    -0.1500

    51.38

    -0.29%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    63.5

    0%

  • VOD

    -0.1700

    14.94

    -1.14%

  • CMSC

    0.0100

    22.66

    +0.04%

  • RYCEF

    0.1600

    16.64

    +0.96%

  • AZN

    -2.7200

    187.03

    -1.45%

  • NGG

    0.1900

    86.61

    +0.22%

  • RIO

    -0.5300

    104.23

    -0.51%

  • BCC

    0.0500

    67.16

    +0.07%

  • CMSD

    0.0100

    22.73

    +0.04%

  • BCE

    0.2100

    24.6

    +0.85%

  • JRI

    0.0500

    12.87

    +0.39%

  • BP

    -0.5100

    44.36

    -1.15%

Sonny Rollins, last jazz 'colossus,' dead at 95
Sonny Rollins, last jazz 'colossus,' dead at 95 / Photo: PASCAL GUYOT - AFP/File

Sonny Rollins, last jazz 'colossus,' dead at 95

Sonny Rollins, the "Saxophone Colossus" whose hard-charging yet flowingly meditative works made him the last in a golden era of jazz greats, died Monday. He was 95.

Text size:

"It is with deep sorrow and profound love that we announce the passing of Sonny Rollins," a post to his social media page said, adding that he "died this afternoon at his home in Woodstock, NY."

A constantly evolving creative force, Rollins found in jazz a means of social and spiritual commentary, with his tenor sax expressing the hopes of African Americans in the civil rights movement, the grief of the United States after the September 11 attacks, and the mystical path he found on extended retreats in India and Japan.

The Harlem-born Rollins -- recognizable in his later years for a shock of white hair -- was one of a handful of saxophone players who defined the instrument, a pantheon that includes Charlie Parker, Coleman Hawkins and John Coltrane, with whom he had an affectionate but complicated relationship.

But unlike so many artists from jazz's defining post-World War II period, Rollins lived a long life, remastering his work well into his 80s even as respiratory issues limited his performances.

In an interview with AFP, Rollins credited his longevity to yoga -- which helped him to concentrate and stay off drugs and alcohol -- but mostly to his creative thirst.

"I'm still alive because I'm still learning," Rollins said in the 2016 interview.

Among major saxophonists, Rollins' style was among the most biting -- a heavy delivery that often struck rather than soothed the listener -- yet he paradoxically was intricate and holistic about composing, describing music as a path to find universal truths.

He was dubbed the "Saxophone Colossus" after the title of his seminal 1956 album, in which he brought a new power to the instrument as he came to define hard bop -- a jazz that was intense and stripped back the genre's structural confines.

The most enduring image of Rollins comes from the early 1960s when, needing a break from his rising fame, he would practice on the Williamsburg Bridge that connects Brooklyn and Manhattan's bustling Lower East Side, playing for nearly every waking hour over three years, even in the cold.

The very public sabbatical produced one of his best-known albums, 1962's "The Bridge," and has led to proposals to rename the Williamsburg Bridge in Rollins' honor.

Rollins also crossed over to a non-jazz audience with occasional forays into rock, most notably his appearances on The Rolling Stones' 1981 album "Tattoo You."

- Childhood of discovery -

Born to parents who moved to New York from the US Virgin Islands, Rollins incorporated some of the inflections of his heritage into his jazz.

"St. Thomas," which appeared on "Saxophone Colossus" and became his best-known song, incorporated Caribbean calypso that he had heard as a child.

Raised in Harlem, the epicenter of African American culture, Rollins recalled that his early musical education came from the Apollo Theater where he would watch its celebrated amateur nights.

By his 20s, Rollins had already managed to play with jazz legends including Parker, Miles Davis and especially Thelonious Monk.

The young Rollins would hang out at Monk's apartment and played on the pianist's classic 1957 album "Brilliant Corners."

Coltrane's relationship with Rollins has often been described as one of rivalry. Both explored new directions in jazz and became fascinated with Indian spirituality.

Whereas Coltrane brought grace and a gentle texture, Rollins arguably delivered a firmer sense of music's ebbs and flows, crafting jazz in the manner of a classical composer.

Coltrane, who died of cancer in 1967, is only known to have recorded once with his contemporary, on the title track of Rollins' 1956 album "Tenor Madness."

Rollins, reflecting on his nearly seven-decade career in the 2016 interview with AFP, said he had perhaps been too brash with the legends around him.

"I look back on my relationship with Coltrane, and my relationship with Monk -- a lot of stupid things I did with those people that I would not have done if I was more mature," said Rollins, who called Coltrane "a beautiful, beautiful human being."

Rollins' manager and wife of nearly 40 years, Lucille, died in 2004.

- Sax 'from subconscious' -

Rollins followed "Saxophone Colossus" with 1957's "Way Out West," in which he introduced his technique of "strolling" -- saxophone solos that would flow over drum and bass, without the piano chords that traditionally kept jazz ensembles in key.

"When I play and I improvise, I don't think, because music comes from the subconscious, someplace else," Rollins told news site The Root.

"I'm just a human, so when I play my horn, I get into a state where the music plays me. I'm just standing up there and fingering my horn and blowing," he said.

Rollins embraced yoga, finding that the breathing techniques and especially the concentration gave him a new fluency with his instrument.

In a sequel to his Williamsburg Bridge years, Rollins took a second sabbatical starting in 1966, learning Zen meditation in Japan before spending several years in an ashram in India, where he arrived with just a bag and his saxophone.

Under the guidance of Swami Chinmayananda on the outskirts of Mumbai, Rollins devoted his days to reading and discussing sacred Vedic texts. He rarely performed, although he later brought his spiritual quest into his music in compositions such as "Patanjali," named for the great yoga master.

Jazz artists "were trying to find a way to express life through our improvisations. The music has got to mean something," Rollins later told National Public Radio.

- Bold civil rights statement -

Rollins found a new purpose to music with "Freedom Suite," his 1958 work that spoke to the rising struggle of African Americans for equal rights.

If musically the 20-minute instrumental piece reflected Rollins' artistic freedom in the abstract, he made no secret of its political bent, penning a message in the liner notes that was strikingly bold for an artist of the era.

"America is deeply rooted in Negro culture: its colloquialisms; its humor; its music. How ironic that the Negro, who more than any other people can claim America's culture as his own, is being persecuted and repressed; that the Negro, who has exemplified the humanities in his very existence, is being rewarded with inhumanity," he wrote.

"Freedom Suite," led by Rollins' confident sax and also notable for Max Roach's drumming, proved controversial enough that a reissue chose another title for the album. Rollins recalled that he was confronted about the piece when he performed in the US South.

Rollins similarly championed Black pride on "Airegin," another of his best-known pieces which is rigorously quick-paced -- and whose title is an anagram for Nigeria.

Rollins found another purpose to his art after the September 11, 2001 attacks, when he was living just six blocks from the doomed World Trade Center. He had to walk down 40 flights of stairs to evacuate his building and felt ill from the fumes.

Nonetheless, Rollins played four days later in Boston -- driving there as flights were grounded -- for a concert that became a live album of remembrance to victims of the attack.

Rollins recalled feeling a sort of serenity as he returned to New York, finding a new empathy in the metropolis.

But Rollins, who later moved to a farm in upstate New York where he had space to meditate, would grow pessimistic at humanity's prospects.

Rollins said that, in the 1960s, he and other artists felt that music could bring peace to the world.

"But then I learned, and I lived a little longer," he told AFP.

"I realized that this world will never change. This world is meant to be a place of war, killing, everything -- sickness, illness, death. That's this world."

R.Krejci--TPP