The Notebooks of Sonny Rollins

Sonny Rollins, Sam V. H. Reese, Sam V. H. Reese

Book cover for The Notebooks of Sonny Rollins
Book cover for The Notebooks of Sonny Rollins

The Notebooks of Sonny Rollins

The Notebooks of Sonny Rollins

Sonny Rollins, Sam V. H. Reese, Sam V. H. Reese

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Description

An illuminating selection of writings on a wide variety of topics--everything from technique, music theory, and daily routine to spirituality and systemic racism--from the personal journals of Sonny Rollins, master of the tenor saxophone and "jazz's greatest living improviser" (The New York Times).

Sonny Rollins is one of the towering masters of American music, a virtuoso of the saxophone and an unequaled improviser whose live performances are legendary and who reshaped modern jazz time and time again over the course of a career lasting more than sixty years. Throughout the greater part of it, Rollins also maintained a notebook in which he sketched in words and images as he pondered art and life and his own search for meaning. The Notebooks of Sonny Rollins provides an unequaled glimpse into the mind and workshop of a musical titan, along with a wealth of insight and inspiration to readers.

In the fall of 1959, Rollins famously took a break from performing and recording. He turned to practicing for long hours, often late at night, on the Williamsburg Bridge, and it was then for the first time that he began to turn regularly to his notebooks, which at the time and in the years to come proved for him an indispensable instrument of change in their own right. Here Rollins can tend towards the aphoristic, as in "Face the startling and intriguing reality that there is within me a force working hard for my own destruction, even as I try to improve." Elsewhere, music is front and center, as he mingles observations on embouchure, fingering, and technique with reflections on harmony and dissonance.

Lists of daily chores, rehearsal routines, reflections on particular tours and recordings (including detailed notes on how Rollins wanted live albums to be edited), and a steady stream of notes on diet and health also find their way into the notebooks, as do ruminations on systemic racism and the way nightclub culture degrades jazz musicians. Rollins emphatically resists claims that jazz should be considered solely as an African American art form, protesting the diminishment that is caused to jazz musicians by labeling their work "racial music." "The point to be absorbed here," he writes, "is that any definition which seeks to separate Johann Sebastian Bach from Miles Davis is defeating its own purpose of clarification. The musings of Miles is then the bouncing of Bach both played against each other."

Carefully selected and including an informative introduction by critic and scholar Sam Reese, The Notebooks of Sonny Rollins makes a vital and fascinating document of American culture publicly available for the first time.

About the Author

Sonny Rollins has been called "jazz's greatest living improviser" by The New York Times. Born in New York City and raised in Harlem, Rollins began by playing alto saxophone but soon switched to the instrument that would make his career, the tenor. He has recorded with musicians such as Miles Davis, Charlie Parker, and Thelonious Monk; composed a number of jazz standards; and has been honored with the Grammy Award for lifetime achievement and a National Medal of Arts, among other awards.

Sam V. H. Reese is a fiction writer, critic, and teacher. His most recent book is Blue Notes: Jazz, Literature, and Loneliness. He lives in the UK.

Critical Reviews

"Rollins pushed the art of melodic improvisation to transcendent new heights, his charismatic sound, his snaking melodies and his rhythmic liquidity ringing the changes as surely as Louis Armstrong had done thirty years earlier.... Rollins kept returning to the possibility of documenting his thoughts about music and other spin-off ideas inside a book.... Here are the workings-out for that never-completed book." --Philip Clark, The Spectator

"It is possible to imagine the jazz musician Sonny Rollins's life as a novel, pitched between realism and surrealism in the manner of Ralph Ellison's Invisible Man...He stares at his psyche as if in front of a full-length mirror. He fills the pages with lists -- of books to read, of favorite songs, of possible titles for his own books. He deplores his impatience, and his lusting after women. He wants to be more punctual...Rollins was a true eccentric." --Dwight Garner, The New York Times

"An indispensable look into the mind and interior life of one of the most celebrated jazz musicians of all time." --The Millions

"Through his notebooks, Rollins emerges as a driven, humble, thoughtful, dedicated, persistent, and spiritual soul in search of a higher force through music.... [These are] illuminating diary entries by a jazz legend." --Dave Szatmary, Library Journal

"A welcome peek into the mind of the great jazz musician.... Reese, author of Blue Notes: Jazz, Literature and Loneliness, delves into the tenor saxophonist's substantial archives in the New York Public Library, unearthing these fascinating notebooks. Divided into four chronological sections covering nearly 50 years, they capture how Rollins' thinking about a wide range of subjects evolved.... Heady musical and philosophical stuff." --Kirkus Reviews

"Music critic and short story writer Reese celebrates tenor saxophonist Sonny Rollins with ... the 93-year-old jazz legend's personal notes spanning from 1959 to 2010. Individually precise, yet somewhat loosely arranged into four broad sections, Rollins's undated jottings break down his practice routine in commentary that can be mundane or surprisingly philosophical.... [A] sense of the artist's complicated internal life and nearly religious dedication to his craft comes through powerfully and poetically.... This will be a boon for Rollins's myriad admirers." --Publishers Weekly

Publishing Information

Publisher: New York Review of Books
Pub date: 2024-04-16
Length: 176 pages

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