Sonny Rollins with the Modern Jazz Quartet
This is the earliest document of Rollins as a leader, recorded when he was twenty-one and already drawing serious attention in New York. The setting is unusual: the Modern Jazz Quartet as a full unit, with vibraphone and piano together, gives the sessions a cooler, more airy texture than the hard bop quartets Rollins would mostly work in later. You can hear him adjusting to it in real time, finding where his big, warm sound fits inside all that delicate vibraphone shimmer.
Milt Jackson is spectacular throughout. He and Rollins have completely different approaches to a melody, and the contrast is productive rather than awkward. John Lewis keeps everything understated and precise, which is his gift. Kenny Clarke is light but present. The track with Miles Davis on piano shows two young musicians who already knew each other well enough to skip the warmup.
The MJQ setting is a one-off in Rollins's catalog, and that distinctiveness is part of the appeal. This is not yet the Rollins of Saxophone Colossus, but the raw materials are unmistakable. A four-star debut from a musician with five-star records already forming in his head.
Moving Out
The title is accurate. Moving Out is Rollins stepping forward, claiming space, asserting that the tenor saxophone has a new voice that needs to be heard. The band helps. Art Blakey is an event unto himself, and his drumming here has that quality he always had of making every other musician in the room play harder and more honestly than they might otherwise. Kenny Dorham on trumpet is sympathetic and sharp.
Elmo Hope is underrated generally, and he's at his best here: angular, harmonically sophisticated, never in the way. The interplay between Hope and Rollins on the slower material is the hidden pleasure of this record. They're thinking about harmony in similar ways, and the conversations they have across the front line and the rhythm section feel like genuine dialogue rather than polite turn-taking.
Moving Out doesn't have the big signature tunes that would come in 1956, but it announces its intentions loudly. This is a record about momentum, and it has it from the first note to the last.
Work Time
No trumpet. Just Rollins, Ray Bryant, George Morrow, and Max Roach, and that space is exactly what this record needed. Without a trumpet sharing the front line, you hear the saxophone fill the room differently. Rollins's tone expands to take up the available space, and the result is one of the most direct statements of what he was about at this stage of his development.
Max Roach is the key relationship here. He and Rollins would record together extensively over the next few years, and you can already hear why. Roach plays with such rhythmic intelligence that his drumming functions almost like a second melodic voice, answering Rollins's phrases rather than just keeping time behind them. The conversation between them on the uptempo tracks is something to follow closely.
Ray Bryant is a warmer, more blues-rooted pianist than Elmo Hope, and the sessions have a slightly different emotional quality for it. Work Time is the sound of Rollins settling into himself, getting comfortable with his own authority, and that comfort sounds like genius.
Sonny Rollins Plus 4
Clifford Brown died in a car accident in June 1956, three months after this session was recorded. That fact is impossible to separate from the listening experience, and you shouldn't try. What you hear on Plus 4 is two of the great improvisers of the era at full power, neither holding anything back, each pushing the other to reach further. The knowledge that this is one of Brown's last recordings in the world adds a weight to every phrase he plays.
Brown's trumpet tone is something that resists description. It's bright without being sharp, warm without being soft, and he phrases with an intelligence that makes every solo feel like a carefully reasoned argument. Against Rollins's bigger, darker tenor, the contrast is perfect. Richie Powell and George Morrow give the rhythm section its floor, and Max Roach, as always, plays like he's conducting the whole room.
Rollins wrote three of the five tunes, including "Pent-Up House" and "Valse Hot," both of which show his compositional gifts alongside his improvisational ones. Plus 4 is essential, full stop. One of the great hard bop records, made more precious by what came after.
Tenor Madness
The title track is the most famous thing on this record, and it deserves the attention. John Coltrane sits in for one extended blues, and what you get is the only extended document of the two greatest tenors of the era playing together in the same room at the same time. Coltrane was deep in his formative phase, Rollins was at the peak of his Prestige period, and the two of them work through the blues with a mutual respect and a barely contained competitiveness that makes every chorus crackle.
The rest of the album is maybe undersold because of that title track, which is a mistake. The rhythm section is the Miles Davis Quintet's rhythm section: Red Garland, Paul Chambers, and Philly Joe Jones, and they play with a swinging ease that suits Rollins perfectly. He sounds entirely comfortable in their pocket, which tells you something about how good the Miles rhythm section was and how good Rollins was at adapting to any environment.
Tenor Madness is one of those records that would be essential even without its most famous track. The fact that it has "Tenor Madness" the tune makes it one of the important documents in jazz history.
Saxophone Colossus
This is the one. "St. Thomas" opens the record and announces immediately that something different is happening: Rollins playing a calypso melody rooted in his family's Virgin Islands heritage, played with such joy and rhythmic invention that it reconfigures what the tenor saxophone can carry. The melody is simple, catchy, unmistakable, and over the course of the track Rollins takes it apart and puts it back together in ways that make it feel both ancient and completely fresh.
"Blue 7" is the other masterpiece. Gunther Schuller wrote a famous analysis of it, and while you don't need to read the analysis to hear what's happening, it's worth knowing: Rollins takes a simple blues theme and uses it as the structural DNA for everything that follows. Every phrase in every solo connects back to that theme. It's not just improvisation. It's composition that happens to sound like improvisation, and it sounds effortless.
Tommy Flanagan is criminally overlooked here, playing with enormous taste and leaving exactly the right amount of space. Max Roach is Max Roach. Saxophone Colossus is the record you give someone when they ask you where to start with Rollins. It answers every question they had and raises ten more interesting ones.
Rollins Plays for Bird
Charlie Parker died in March 1955, and this record, made in September 1956, is Rollins's explicit tribute. The repertoire is all Parker-associated material: "My Little Suede Shoes," "Kim," "Lover Man," "I've Grown Accustomed to Her Face," and others. The question any tribute record has to answer is whether it illuminates the subject or just implicates the performer in idol worship. Rollins answers it cleanly: he plays these tunes as himself, absorbing what Parker gave him and then moving through it rather than around it.
Kenny Dorham returns on trumpet and is perfect for this context: rooted in bop, warm, swinging, never trying to be Bird. Wade Legge is less well-known than most of Rollins's Prestige pianists but fits the sessions well, providing clean, rhythmically alert support. Max Roach brings a precision and elegance to the Bird material that feels like its own form of tribute.
Rollins Plays for Bird is the quietest entry in this remarkable run of 1956 records. Coming after Saxophone Colossus and Tenor Madness, it's easy to hear it as a step back. It isn't. It's a different kind of statement: smaller in ambition, more devoted in feeling, and completely honest about where Rollins came from and who he owed.
Tour de Force
Tour de Force was Rollins's last recording for Prestige, cut at Van Gelder's Hackensack studio in early December 1956, just six months after Saxophone Colossus. By this point Rollins knew he was leaving the label, and there's a sense of summing up here, a final statement made for a friend before walking out the door. The same rhythm section that powered the great Brown-Roach quintet, minus Brown, gives him exactly what he needs: bedrock support without ever crowding the soloist.
The instrumental tracks are the heart of the record. "B. Quick," a Rollins original built on the changes of "Cherokee," is the flag-waver, taken at a tempo that should be impossible and isn't. "B. Swift" is its sibling, fast and dexterous, with that particular Rollins blend of harmonic invention and rhythmic stamina. "Ee-Ah" is a relaxed blues that lets him do what he does better than anyone, telling a story rather than running through changes. Kenny Drew is everything you want from a hard bop pianist on dates like this: harmonically alert, rhythmically locked in, never going for fireworks when fireworks aren't called for. The two Earl Coleman vocal features, "Two Different Worlds" and "My Ideal," are odd inclusions that mostly just let Rollins set up tasteful obbligatos behind a singer.
The record gets overshadowed by the giant in front of it (Saxophone Colossus) and the giants ahead of it (Way Out West, the Blue Note volumes), but it's a stronger session than its reputation suggests. Listen for the calm authority. This is Rollins playing without anything to prove, and that turns out to suit him as well as anything.
Sonny Boy
Sonny Boy is a Prestige clean-out, released in 1961 to consolidate leftover Rollins material from two 1956 sessions. Most of it isn't actually new music: three of the five tracks ("Ee-Ah," "B. Quick," "B. Swift") are the same takes already issued on Tour de Force four years earlier, simply repackaged. The genuinely new material is the title track (a Dec 7, 1956 performance that sat in the vault until Rollins mentioned it to critic Joe Goldberg) and "The House I Live In," recorded October 5, 1956 with Kenny Dorham and Wade Legge added (a leftover from the Plays for Bird sessions). Compilations like this can be uneven, and this one shows the seams.
That said, there's good music here. The title track is a charming take on the Al Jolson chestnut, exactly the sort of obscure American songbook turn Rollins loved to find, and it's a small mystery why Prestige didn't release it on Tour de Force in the first place. "The House I Live In" is the standout cut, with Dorham's warm trumpet playing beautifully against Rollins's tenor, and Wade Legge holding down the harmony with quiet authority. If you've already got Tour de Force, the new material here amounts to two tracks, but they're worth hearing.
Don't start here. Saxophone Colossus, Tenor Madness, and Tour de Force are the records that tell the story. Sonny Boy fills in the margins, useful if you've already heard the canon and want more, but not the place to begin. It earns its place on the shelf for completists and anyone curious about what Prestige had been sitting on.