Way Out West | |
Type: | Album |
Artist: | Sonny Rollins |
Cover: | Sonny Rollins-Way Out West (album cover).jpg |
Released: | 1957 |
Recorded: | March 7, 1957 |
Studio: | Contemporary Records (Los Angeles) |
Genre: | Hard bop |
Length: | 43:25 |
Label: | Contemporary |
Producer: | Lester Koenig |
Prev Title: | Sonny Rollins, Vol. 1 |
Prev Year: | 1957 |
Next Title: | Sonny Rollins, Vol. 2 |
Next Year: | 1957 |
Way Out West is a 1957 album by Sonny Rollins with bassist Ray Brown and drummer Shelly Manne, neither of whom had previously played or recorded with Rollins. The music employs a technique called "strolling", used here by Rollins for the first time, in which he would solo over only bass and drums with no pianist or guitarist playing chords. The reissue of the CD has additional takes of three of the songs, including the title track. These additional takes are all about twice as long, containing much longer solos from all three members of the band.
According to the liner notes by producer Lester Koenig, recording began at 3:00 a.m. to fit the musicians' busy schedules, but "[a]t 7 a.m., after four hours of intense concentration, during which they recorded half the album, and should have been exhausted, Sonny said, 'I'm hot now.' Shelly who had been up for 24 hours, said, 'Man, I feel like playing.' And Ray, who was equally tired and had a studio call for the afternoon, just smiled."
The cover photo was taken by celebrated jazz photographer William Claxton. Rollins stands amid a stretch of desert vegetation, dressed in a Stetson hat, gun belt, and empty holster, and holds his saxophone at waist level as if it were a pistol. The photo concept was Rollins' own idea to celebrate his first trip West.
In his AllMusic review, Scott Yanow wrote: "The timeless Way out West established Sonny Rollins as jazz's top tenor saxophonist (at least until John Coltrane surpassed him the following year). Joined by bassist Ray Brown and drummer Shelly Manne, Rollins is heard at one of his peaks."
When the album was reissued on CD in 1988 (and in subsequent years), some alternate takes were included.
The 20-bit CD issue groups the alternate takes at the end.