Sonny Rollins

By NICK CHILES

Recently I had the precious opportunity to pay tribute to two old black men, both fabulous in their own special ways. I'm talking about the legendary saxophonist, Sonny Rollins, and my dad, Walter Chiles. On the spur of the moment and at my wife's urging, I decided to treat my 77-year-old dad to a trip to New York City to catch Sonny's concert at the Beacon Theater, where he was joined by a host of famous jazzmen to celebrate his 80th birthday. Dad and I were both geeked about this rare opportunity to catch a legend, perhaps one of the last times this famously solitary figure might be playing on an American stage. I was also giddy about the chance to take a rare road trip with my dad. It's weird how we find ourselves at this place I go off to college, start a family, fill up my life and days with grown-man responsibilities, and then look up and realize three decades have passed and we've never really taken a trip together. Now I'm middle-aged, Dad is old, and we're both thrilled about something that, on its surface, seems so mundane: a road trip. 

As the plane approached the New York City skyline for its landing at LaGuardia, I was so grateful for this time together that I almost wanted to pinch myself.

We enjoyed a nice meal at a comfortable Mediterranean restaurant, the kind of solid reliable joint you find on practically every other block in Manhattan. Then we made our way over to the Beacon. We were a bit disappointed that, among the several thousand people cramming into this Upper West Side landmark, we could probably count the number of African Americans on our four hands. It's a sad statement about how the stature of jazz has plummeted in the black community. Indeed, the fact that I was able to secure very good seats (through Ticketmaster, no less!) to this monumental event just 10 days before the concert spoke volumes about the lowly place jazz now occupies in the American consciousness.

But the house was full and Sonny did not disappoint. A bit hunched over, moving across the stage a little more slowly the New York Times said he called to mind an Old Testament prophet Sonny played for two hours without stopping. He still had his chops, sliding easily through some of the more challenging and pleasurable pieces in his long, impressive songbook. One by one, he brought out some of the most talented jazz musicians in the business to join him on stage, players like the sweet-toned trumpeter Roy Hargrove, the funky bassist Christian McBride, the nimble guitarist Jim Hall, 79, and the legendary Ornette Coleman, 80. A rotating dream team, one would leave and another would come on.

Sonny is the last of our iconic jazz greats, a monumental figure in the history of this sensational American music form.

He was right there during the creation and burnishing of bebop, the audacious style that gave jazz its swagger, and he's still going strong, producing fabulous music across an unbelievable eight decades, starting in the 1940s. The rest of the bebop pantheon has passed on Bird, Coltrane, Monk, Miles, Dizzy, Roach leaving Sonny all alone, a solitary man with the magical tenor sax. (One of Sonny's most famous recordings was a session he did with Coltrane called Tenor Madness.) I felt privileged to be a witness at the Beacon, a part of American history just by my membership in the audience. It's perhaps what it would have been like to sit there at one of Mozart's last piano recitals, or one of Louie Armstrong's final trumpet solos. I'm not predicting that Sonny is going anywhere anytime soon, but he plays so seldom in the jazz-indifferent U.S. these days that there's no telling when he might be back. Audiences in Europe and Japan have a much better chance of seeing him. 

During the concert, when Sonny brought out the great drummer, Roy Haynes, who is amazingly 85 but looks 50, my dad leaned over and said, He played with my trio in the Sixties. 

My dad, Walter Chiles, keyboardist

And that's another reason why this trip was so special to me. While Walter Chiles never achieved the fame and stature of Sonny Rollins or Roy Haynes, he had quite a fabulous music career himself. He's now content to be the minister of music at his Atlanta church, writing original pieces for the gospel choirs that he smoothly takes through their paces on Sundays. But if you sit him down and get him going, Dad will spin amazing tales that will have your bottom jaw bouncing on the floor. 

Dad's first bit of notoriety came with the trio known as Chiles & Pettiford. They were keyboards (Chiles), bass (Pettiford) and drums. They played and they sang, their unusual interweaving two-part harmonies drawing rave reviews, particularly after they recorded an album on the Blue Note label called Live at Jilly's, Jilly's being the nightclub owned by Jilly Rizzo, Frank Sinatra's bodyguard. It came out the year I was born, 45 years ago. At Jilly's, Dad played with artists like Sarah Vaughan, Charlie Mingus, Roy Haynes and even Johnny Carson and Ed McMahon (Johnny fancied himself a drummer, while Ed thought he could sing the blues). These artists would sit in with the Chiles & Pettiford trio on a whim entertaining a crowd that sometimes included heavyweights like Miles Davis and Sinatra. Once, when Sinatra was preparing for a big concert date, he asked my da
d to help him practice. Every day for a week, Dad would take the elevator up to Sinatra's vast penthouse apartment overlooking Central Park and they would practice for hours at a time, with few breaks. Frank was all business.

Me and my dad, the coolest cat on the planet

The Sonny Rollins concert was fitting for me and my dad, kind of closing a circle. One of my most vivid memories from my late teenage years was when Dad and I traveled over to Manhattan from our New Jersey home in 1985 to catch Sonny's free solo concert in the sculpture garden of the Museum of Modern Art. The line was so long that we couldn't get in, but we joined about 40 other people who listened to Sonny from the sidewalk outside the garden, our faces pressed against the iron fence to catch glimpses of him as he roamed the grounds, sending wonderfully sweet notes out into the hot New York summer night. (His album from that night can still be purchased.) This is when my love of jazz was permanently stamped on my DNA, a gift from Dad. 

So here we were, exactly 25 years later, back in the city to see Sonny. I caught a glimpse of Dad's face as Sonny played. He was transfixed and happy. So was I.


post signature

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...

6 Comments

  1. Thank you! What a wonderful tribute to two great men. It made me recall my own father and his gift of jazz and music.

    Sunday evenings were spent sitting with him in his big man chair, me with headphones that were way too big for a 6 year old, facing his wall and I mean wall of pristine jazz and blues albums listening to Charles Pettiford – Blues in the closet, Mingus – moanin, Ben Webster-the Brute….I can go on and on.

    Thank you for reminding me where this love came from. I wish you many more years of shared love with your father and family.

  2. My daughter took me to see Sonny at the Beacon. I last saw him at 70 in Newark NJ at the Pru Center, Another great night, compliments of my brother-in-law and close friend, Joe W.
    I've seen Sonny six or seven times in my life; the first time at a place in Newark called Sugar Hill. That was in '58 just before I turned 18. My buddy Hodge and I watched and listened in an alcove, too young to get in. But Sonny invited us in and we went downstairs to the dressing room where he invited either of us to sit in with the band-Max Roach, Kenny Dorham, etc. Of course we didn't; we both played tenor sax, but who would sit in with Sonny Rollins and Max Roach and still maintain any sanity? That was the greatest regret of my life; I would have made a fool of myself, but what a tale that would have been to tell! Richard Grady

  3. Chiles & Pettiford Live at Jilly's!!!! One of my favorite albums of all-time. School days, school days dear old golden rule days….oh, did get me started..a classic! One of my dads old albums i used to wear out as a little kid in the early 70s…haven't heard it in years but all the tunes are still in my head some 30 plus years later.

    scott b.

  4. What a beautiful story! I have been looking for "Chiles & Pettiford Live at Jilly's" for years. Odia Chiles gave me a copy when we were in college and I loved every single song on it, especially the Blue Skies/Happy Days are Here Again medley. My ex-husband threw it away in a dumpster years ago and I have been looking for another copy ever since. I was able to download a copy of "The Joker" from iTunes but I cannot find the original album or any other songs from the LP. I would love to be able to enjoy these two incredible artists again and introduce their music to my children.
    PCH.

  5. Thanks Nick, its been over a year since we saw Sonny live in NYC.
    What a night!!! One I’ll never forget! I love Sonny, but spending that weekend with you my one and only son is a memory I’ll always cherish ,and with ole age slowly approaching my love for you my son will always keep me young and vibrant.
    love Dad.

  6. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BuBd9AUfZ-Y

    I came across this article after the above song came to mind. This song was big in London in the late 1980s and I managed to get a copy from Rose Records in New York.

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

CLOSE
CLOSE