Sonny Side Up: Difference between revisions

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| artist = [[Sonny Rollins]]
| artist = [[Sonny Rollins]]
| type = studio album
| type = studio album
| prev_title = [[A Night at the Village Vanguard]]
| prev_title = [[Freedom Suite (Sonny Rollins album)|Freedom Suite]]
| prev_year = 1957
| prev_year = 1958
| title = Sonny Side Up
| title = Sonny Side Up
| year = 1957
| year = 1959
| next_title = [[Freedom Suite (Sonny Rollins album)|Freedom Suite]]
| next_title = [[Newk's Time]]
| next_year = 1958
| next_year = 1959
}}
}}
{{Extra chronology
{{Extra chronology
| artist = [[Sonny Stitt]]
| artist = [[Sonny Stitt]]
| type = Album
| type = Album
| prev_title = [[Sonny Stitt with the New Yorkers]]
| prev_title = [[Sonny Stitt Sits in with the Oscar Peterson Trio]]
| prev_year = 1957
| prev_year = 1959
| title = Sonny Side Up
| title = Sonny Side Up
| year = 1957
| year = 1959
| next_title = [[The Saxophones of Sonny Stitt]]
| next_title = [[The Hard Swing]]
| next_year = 1958
| next_year = 1959
}}
}}
}}
}}

Revision as of 06:48, 2 November 2020

Sonny Side Up
Studio album by
ReleasedJanuary 1959[1]
RecordedDecember 19, 1957
Nola Recording Studio, New York City
GenreJazz, bebop, hard bop
Length37:42
LabelVerve
MGV-8262
ProducerNorman Granz
Dizzy Gillespie chronology
The Greatest Trumpet of Them All
(1957)
Sonny Side Up
(1959)
The Ebullient Mr. Gillespie
(1959)
Sonny Rollins chronology
Freedom Suite
(1958)
Sonny Side Up
(1959)
Newk's Time
(1959)
Sonny Stitt chronology
Sonny Stitt Sits in with the Oscar Peterson Trio
(1959)
Sonny Side Up
(1959)
The Hard Swing
(1959)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[2]

Sonny Side Up is an album by trumpeter Dizzy Gillespie, and the tenor saxophonists Sonny Stitt and Sonny Rollins, recorded in December 1957 in New York City. It was released in 1959 on producer Norman Granz's newly launched Verve label.

As Thomas Cunniffe has written, "The pairing of Rollins and Stitt was highly inspired. More important than their common nicknames (and the punning album title), tenor saxophonists Rollins and Stitt were both influenced by Charlie Parker, but each took a vastly different approach to improvisation. Stitt transferred Parker’s white-hot intensity to the tenor after several fans and critics pointed out the tonal similarity of their alto sounds. Rollins was a more thoughtful player who expanded the vocabulary of bop improvisation by incorporating thematic elements into his solos and by experimenting with different melodic shapes and unusual phrase lengths."[3]

Pianist Ray Bryant, bassist Tommy Bryant, and drummer Charlie Persip provide the rhythm section.[4]

Track listing

  1. "On the Sunny Side of the Street" (Jimmy McHugh, Dorothy Fields) – 5:41
  2. "The Eternal Triangle" (Stitt) – 14:10
  3. "After Hours" (Avery Parrish) – 12:19
  4. "I Know That You Know" (Vincent Youmans, Anne Caldwell) – 5:27

Personnel

Additional personnel

  • Burt Goldblatt – cover photography
  • Nat Hentoff – liner notes

References

  1. ^ Billboard, February 9, 1959.
  2. ^ "Sonny Side Up - Dizzy Gillespie, Sonny Stitt, Sonny Rollins | Songs, Reviews, Credits | AllMusic" – via www.allmusic.com.
  3. ^ "Dizzy Gillespie:'Sonny Side Up' (Verve 314 521 426)/'Duets' (Verve 835 253)", Retro Reviews - Jazz History Online.
  4. ^ Stephen Cook, Allmusic review