Acoustic Sounds
Sonny Rollins "a night at the Village Vanguard"—the complete masters
By: Tracking Angle

February 7th, 2024

Category:

News

Blue Note Announces Special Tone Poet Vinyl Edition of Sonny Rollins' "A Night At the Village Vanguard: The Complete Masters

Cut for the first time directly from newly discovered never-before-used original master tapes!

February 7th—Blue Note Records today announced a March 29 release of Sonny Rollins A Night at the Village Vanguard: The Complete Masters, a special Tone Poet Vinyl Edition of the legendary saxophonist’s tour-de-force live trio album. The expanded 3-LP set, which can be pre-ordered now on the Blue Note Store, marks the first time Rollins’ complete recorded performances at the Village Vanguard on November 3, 1957 will be made available in a single vinyl package. The collection will also be released as a 2-CD set and on all digital formats.

ROLLINS’ TOUR-DE-FORCE 1957 LIVE TRIO ALBUM PRESENTED AS AN EXPANDED 3-LP SET

INCLUDING A BOOKLET FEATURING NEVER-BEFORE-SEEN PHOTOS BY FRANCIS WOLFF, ESSAYS &

A NEW INTERVIEW WITH ROLLINS IN CONVERSATION WITH BLUE NOTE PRESIDENT DON WAS

PRODUCED FOR RELEASE BY JOE HARLEY WITH ALL-ANALOG MASTERING BY KEVIN GRAY

CUT DIRECTLY FROM THE NEWLY DISCOVERED NEVER-BEFORE-USED ORIGINAL MASTER TAPES

Produced for release by Joe Harley, the vinyl is all-analog and cut directly by Kevin Gray from Rudy Van Gelder’s newly discovered and never-before-used original 7.5ips master tapes. Pressed on 180g vinyl at RTI, the three LPs come packaged in a deluxe tip-on trifold jacket which includes a booklet with never-before-seen photos by Francis Wolff; insightful essays by esteemed critics Nate Chinen and Bob Blumenthal; an excerpt from Aidan Levy’s authoritative Rollins biography Saxophone Colossus which provides a riveting behind-the-scenes account of the volatile circumstances surrounding the recording; and a fascinating new interview with Rollins himself reflecting upon the album in conversation with Blue Note President Don Was.

Sonny Rollins

 “I am thrilled with how this special edition of Sonny’s Village Vanguard masterpiece turned out,” said Harley. “For years, I had seen the famous photo of Rudy Van Gelder and Alfred Lion at this gig which showed a very visible Ampex 601 portable tape deck. I had always thought that perhaps it had been there as a safety to Rudy’s big 15ips Ampex deck, but then it hit me: Of course he didn’t bring the big, heavy pro deck downstairs at the Vanguard… how would you even get it down the stairs! Rudy had taken the 7.5ips tapes back to his studio and transferred them to his main 15ips deck to then be assembled and readied for mastering. So, thanks to the first-time use of the actual master tapes and a trove of newly discovered photos, you now have the best seat in the house!”

Rollins had already recorded three Blue Note studio dates for Alfred LionSonny Rollins, Sonny Rollins, Vol. 2, and Newk’s Time—in the year preceding the Village Vanguard session, which would be Rollins’ first-ever live album, as well as the first-ever live album to be recorded at the iconic New York City jazz club. The music was predominantly captured at the evening set featuring Wilbur Ware on bass and Elvin Jones on drums with two pieces coming from the afternoon set featuring Donald Bailey on bass and Pete La Roca on drums.

 “I was so involved in what I was doing,” Rollins told Was. “I was a young guy. Playing the music was paramount in my mind, that was the only thing I was thinking about: having fun and getting the musical vibe right… I know it was a good record and I was completely happy playing with those guys: Elvin and, of course, Wilbur Ware. Everything just fit together perfectly.”

 

 “Some iconic jazz albums seem improbable, as if they’d managed to slip through the filters of happenstance. Others feel inevitable, like the fulfillment of a cosmic decree. A few manage to convey both impressions at once. Such is the case with A Night at the Village Vanguard, which rightly figures in conversations about the greatest recordings ever made. It's not a carefully plotted concept album, nor a blazing manifesto, but a document with the slangy nonchalance of a conversation overheard on the street, extemporaneous and unburdened. It's a slice of musical vérité that captures a true master of the form on a good day, in a generous and jocular mood.

Nate Chinen

His playing is relentless, fierce, totally engaged; and the trio context provides the necessary latitude to pull and bend the material without having it fly apart… he took these compositions to their limits, in an unyielding flow of ideas and emotion.

Bob Blumenthal

 

*Sonny Rollins – A Night at the Village Vanguard: The Complete Masters

 

Side 1:

1. Introduction - 0:36

2. Old Devil Moon (B. Lane, E.Y. Harburg) - 8:19

3. Softly As In A Morning Sunrise (O. Hammerstein, S. Romberg) - 8:03

4. Striver’s Row (S. Rollins) - 5:59

 

Side 2:

1. Sonnymoon For Two (Sonny Rollins) - 8:46

2. A Night In Tunisia (D. Gillespie, F. Paparelli) - 8:16 *

3. I Can’t Get Started (I. Gershwin, V. Duke) - 4:54

 

Side 3:

1. A Night In Tunisia (Evening Take) (D. Gillespie, F. Paparelli) - 9:03

2. I’ve Got You Under My Skin (C. Porter) - 10:03 *

 

Side 4:

1. Softly As In A Morning Sunrise (Alternate Take) (O. Hammerstein, S. Romberg) - 6:43

2. What Is This Thing Called Love (C. Porter) - 14:03

 

Side 5:

1. All The Things You Are (O. Hammerstein, J. Kern) - 6:46

2. Introduction - 0:20

3. Woody ‘N You (D. Gillespie) - 8:29

4. Four (M. Davis) - 8:26

 

Side 6:

1. I’ll Remember April (Raye, DePaul, Johnston) - 9:20

2. Get Happy (H. Arlen, T. Koehler) - 9:08

3. Get Happy (Short Version) (H. Arlen, T. Koehler) - 4:38

 

Sonny Rollins, tenor saxophone

Wilbur Ware, bass

Elvin Jones, drums

Donald Bailey, bass*

Pete La Roca, drums*

 

Recorded on November 3, 1957, live at the Village Vanguard, NYC

Original Session Produced by ALFRED LION

Recording Engineer RUDY VAN GELDER

Cover Design by REID MILES

Photography FRANCIS WOLFF

Compilation Produced by JOE HARLEY

LP Mastering by KEVIN GRAY, Cohearent Audio

 

Comments

  • 2024-02-07 04:21:27 PM

    Bob Donnelly wrote:

    Love the original release, I look forward to getting this. Great sessions!

  • 2024-02-07 06:47:01 PM

    Josquin des Prez wrote:

    Can't wait for this. This will be Tone Poet #100, BTW (counting the Ornette box as six albums).

  • 2024-02-07 07:06:12 PM

    Come on wrote:

    Although the first of this set would have been enough for me, I might buy it if the tape used is really clearly better than what was used before.

    I have the fine sounding Classic Records release and had the two more, differently colored Japanese versions of the outtakes. Sold the outtake LP‘s long ago, remember them less essential compared to the first LP. I guess the tracks were the same as the 2 following Tone Poet LP’s of this set.

  • 2024-02-08 03:07:20 AM

    Michael Kuhl wrote:

    This is great, but what the jazz world needs is a Tone Poet release of Sonny Clark - Blues In The Night!

    • 2024-02-08 10:38:46 AM

      Come on wrote:

      When I look through my Blue Note originals and Japanese pressings that never got a really high quality reissue from Classic Records, Music Matters, Tone Poet, BN Classic or 80’s series and not even Cuscuna’s not comparable Connoisseur series, then my most important would be Curtis Fuller Vol. 3. Listen to the track “Quantrale” and you know why.

      Next would be Grachan Moncur III/Some other stuff, Hutcherson Components, Dialogue, Inner glow, Donald Byrd/Free form. Two of them were at least reissued in the Connoisseur series, which was AAA but not today’s best reissue quality.