G-Man

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G-Man album cover
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK // LIVE

Total Tracks: 4   Total Length: 44:43

eMusic Review 0

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Fred Kaplan

eMusic Contributor

04.22.11
Sonny Rollins, G-Man
2001 | Label: Fantasy / Milestone

This was recorded at Opus 40, a club in the Hudson Valley, in August, 1986, after a spate of humdrum studio albums made jazz fans wonder if Sonny Rollins, the saxophone colossus, had lost his touch — and it blew everybody away. This is an amazing album, one of Rollins 'best. His long, long solos on the title tune and, even more, on "Don't Stop the Carnival," where he dips deeper than ever into his love for Caribbean rhythms, are jaw-dropping. He interacts more intensively than usual with his rhythm section as well, especially Marvin "Smitty" Smith on drums. Head-spinning.

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Explosive !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

fchinaone

No stop hard core blowing, first heard this track in 1987, had the album since. Re-discovered it here. Simply a masterpiece. Must have for Rollins' fans.

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Hose This Man Down

TopCat

My God! Sonny Rollins! Devastatingly Hot!

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Live Jazz

By Fred Kaplan, eMusic Contributor

Live jazz albums may not be as polished or precise as those recorded in a studio, but when the players are up and the listeners are game, the results can be more thrilling. Jazz is essentially an improvisational music — the critic Whitney Balliett called it "the sound of surprise" — and when the clocks are stopped and the safety nets removed (no take-two, no fix-it-in-the-mix), the ride can veer off the rails in unexpected… more »

They Say All Music Guide

The soundtrack to the performance film Saxophone Colossus features long Sonny Rollins tenor solos on “G-Man” and “Don’t Stop the Carnival” and a briefer one during “Kim.” Joined by his usual quintet of the era (trombonist Clifton Anderson, pianist Mark Soskin, electric bassist Bob Cranshaw and drummer Marvin “Smitty” Smith), Rollins is in good form, saying little that it is new but delivering passionate messages with his typical spirit; the video is worth getting too. – Scott Yanow