Doxy Records to Release
"Road Shows, vol. 3,"
First Sonny Rollins Album
Under New Distribution Agreement with
Sony Music Masterworks/OKeh,
On May 6
"Road Shows, vol. 3,"
First Sonny Rollins Album
Under New Distribution Agreement with
Sony Music Masterworks/OKeh,
On May 6
CD Contains Six Tracks
Recorded in Japan, France, and the U.S.
Between 2001 and 2012
Recorded in Japan, France, and the U.S.
Between 2001 and 2012
Rollins to Participate in a Google+ Hangout,
"Sonny Rollins Meets His Fans,"
May 5 at 12:00 Noon EDT
April 9, 2014
Road Shows, vol. 3, to be released May 6
as part of a distribution agreement with Sony Music Masterworks and its
jazz imprint OKeh, draws its six tracks from concerts recorded between
2001 and 2012 in Saitama, Japan; Toulouse, Marseille, and Marciac,
France; and St. Louis, Missouri. "Patanjali," a recent-vintage Rollins
composition, is given its debut recording on the new disc. The
performances, says Rollins, "present parts of me I want to have
presented."
On May 5 at 12:00 noon EDT, Rollins will expand his forays into social-media territory (and CD promotion) by participating in an unprecedented video conference, "Sonny Rollins Meets His Fans,"
broadcast live on YouTube and Google+. Ten members of Sonny's global
community of listeners and fellow musicians, chosen from the winners of a
video contest on his Facebook page, will interact with Sonny, one by
one, in real-time video, utilizing Google's popular Hangout platform.
Immediately after the live broadcast, the program will be available for
viewing on demand on Sonny's web site and Facebook page. In addition to
the ten guests (each of whom will receive a copy of Road Shows, vol. 3), moderator Bret Primack will be choosing questions from Google+ viewers.
"As one of the few jazz musicians able to fashion a career exclusively as a concert artist," writes Bob Blumenthal
in his CD notes, "[Rollins] has made his appearances events that blend
the soul-baring seriousness of a 'classical' recital with the
participatory release of a music that has always drawn on various kinds
of call and response. At his best, which Rollins presents to us here and
in the previous Road Shows, he rides the spontaneity of the moment into unique collections of moods, grooves, and feelings."
Road Shows' material reflects an artist who has become as enthralled by narrative lines as melodic. Noel Coward's "Someday I'll Find You" -- which he first recorded on 1958's Freedom Suite and then on Sonny, Please -- takes him back to his boyhood days, when it was the theme for the long-running radio show, Mr. Keen, Tracer of Lost Persons.
The infectious "Biji," introduced on the 1995 album, Sonny +3,
was written "back in the days when guys had nicknames like Rahsaan and
Famoudou. I adopted Brung Biji as mine. It was sort of African style."
"Patanjali" is named after the sage whose Yoga Sutras,
he says, "lay down everything you need to know" about a discipline and
philosophy that "has helped me get through life and kept me trying to be
a better human being."
The nearly 24-minute rendering of Jerome Kern and Oscar Hammerstein II's masterwork, "Why Was I Born,"
is as moving as it is breathtaking -- a monument to Rollins's emotional
powers. He won a 2006 Grammy for his version of it on Without a Song: The 9/11 Concert, performing it in Boston five days after the terrorist attack on New York, which forced him to evacuate his apartment.
"I've played it a
lot," he says. "So I was wondering whether I should put it out again. I
decided to because it captured me going in certain directions I felt
needed to be put on record. I actually had two versions to choose from.
On one of them, everything was quite clean. On this one, I played
something I might be the only one who likes. But I liked the groove and a
lot of other things. It represents Sonny Rollins at a certain point of
creation."
Rounding out the
program, there's an eight-minute, stand-alone cadenza taken from a 2009
St. Louis show and a brief, album-closing dose of his perennial
crowd-pleaser, "Don't Stop the Carnival."
Sony Music Masterworks comprises the Masterworks, Sony Classical, OKeh, Portrait, Masterworks Broadway, and Flying Buddha imprints. For email updates and information, please visit www.SonyMasterworks.com.
Follow Sonny:
Media Contacts:
Terri Hinte, hudba@sbcglobal.net, 510/234-8781
For Sony Music Masterworks/OKeh:
Angela Barkan, angela.barkan@sonymusic.com, 212-833-8575
Larissa Slezak, larissa.slezak@sonymusic.com, 212-833-6075