The odd billing for this two-fer reissue, to the
Clifford Brown/
Sonny Rollins/
Max Roach Quintet (a name that never graced a marquee), may help explain the album title,
Complete Studio Recordings.
Rollins was the last occupant of the saxophone chair in the
Clifford Brown -
Max Roach Quintet, joining in late 1955 and remaining until
Brown and pianist
Richie Powell were killed in a car accident in June 1956. During that time, the quintet recorded an album,
Clifford Brown and Max Roach at Basin Street (which, despite its name, was a studio recording), for EmArcy Records, and
Rollins led the same personnel in a session for Prestige Records released as Sonny Rollins Plus Four. Those two albums are combined on this disc, presenting all the master takes recorded by the group and, thus, its "complete studio recordings." Whatever the group is called, it plays well.
Brown's reputation, enhanced by his early death, is justified by his imaginative soloing;
Rollins, while still young, is already an accomplished talent; and
Roach is his usual self, playing up a storm. The Prestige material, occupying the last five tracks, does lean a bit more in
Rollins' direction, as he contributes two original compositions, and
Brown actually lays out on the final number,
Irving Berlin's "Count Your Blessings," leaving the field entirely to
Rollins. How long this band might have continued if tragedy hadn't struck is impossible to say. But what it left behind here makes that an inescapable speculation for jazz fans.