© 2026 KWBU
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

David and Art - Sonny

Today on David and Art, host David Smith shares the story of a musician many critics consider one of jazz’s greatest improvisers

Walter Theodore “Sonny” Rollins was born in Harlem on September 7, 1930. His mom and his dad—who was a U.S. Navy veteran—immigrated to Harlem from the Virgin Islands in the Caribbean.

When he was still a little boy, something about Harlem’s jazz musicians made them his heroes. He listened to them play their sets through the basement windows of clubs. One evening, at the age of eight, he snuck into one. Finally, his mother gave him a secondhand alto saxophone. Then he acquired a tenor sax. That became the instrument of his fame.

He made his first recording in 1949, when he was about 19, and for a few years recorded as a sideman to some of the greats. In 1956 he recorded Saxophone Colossus, his breakthrough album as a leader. In reviewing it, Billboard magazine called him “one of the most vigorous, dynamic and inventive of modern jazzmen,” one who “develops each solo with great architectural logic.” Indeed, some critics came to regard Rollins as simply the greatest improviser in the history of jazz. His solos, said one French writer, would be more accurately thought of as sermons.

Rollins was named a “Jazz Master” by the National Endowment for the Arts in 1983 and received a lifetime achievement Grammy in 2004.

In 2010 he was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the next year received both a National Medal of Arts and was named a Kennedy Center Honoree.

In 2024, Rollins became the last survivor of the 58 musicians portrayed in photographer Art Kane’s famous photo “Harlem 1958”—often referred to as “a great day in Harlem”—that Kane took for Esquire magazine.

In that picture, alongside Rollins, were also Count Basie, Art Blakey, Dizzy, Coleman Hawkins, Horace Silver, Monk, Mingus, and Lester Young. All of them among the greatest American musicians of the 20th century.

And now, all of them gone. Last Monday, Sonny Rollins died at his home in Woodstock, New York. He was 95.

Today, put on his 1956 tune “St. Thomas” and listen to the clarity and richness of his tone. Listen to the shape of his phrases, each one as coherent as a sentence. Feel the smoothness of this most sublime communication as it reaches and envelopes you. That’s the eternal sound of a gifted artist.

RECENT EPISODES OF DAVID AND ART
David and Art - Sonny
Today on David and Art, host David Smith shares the story of a musician many critics consider one of jazz’s greatest improvisers
David and Art - Miles Ahead
Jazz changed a lot in the second half of the 20th century, and Miles Davis somehow seemed to be standing near the center of nearly all of it. Today on David and Art, host David Smith continues his look at Davis, his music, and his life.
David and Art - Miles to Go
Last week we started talking about jazz legend Miles Davis, the centennial of whose birth is this month.
David and Art - Miles and Miles, Davis
This month brings the 100th birthday of one of the most influential musicians in all of American history.
David and Art - The Saga of Guernica
On David and Art, host David Smith continues his look at why a famous anti-war painting is back in the news—and why debates around it are about much more than art.
David and Art - Guernica Part Two
Last week on David and Art, we looked at the origins of a well-known painting. Today, host David Smith picks up the story and traces where it went next.
David and Art - Guernica
On today’s David and Art, host David Smith looks at how one of the 20th century’s most well-known paintings came out of a moment of war—and why it still draws attention today.
David and Art - Remembering a Critic
On today’s David and Art, host David Smith looks back at the life and work of a longtime art critic whose writing helped bring clarity to the modern art world, and offered readers a closer look at the artists behind it.
David and Art - Art and National Identity, Part 2
Ideas about national identity don’t just show up in politics—they show up in art and architecture, too. Today on David and Art, host David Smith continues that conversation.
David and Art - "Art and National Identity"
David Smith gives some insight as to how nations use are and architecture to define who they are.

David Smith, host of David and Art, is an American historian with broad interests in his field. He’s been at Baylor University since 2002 teaching classes in American history, military history, and cultural history. For eight years he wrote an arts and culture column for the Waco Tribune-Herald, and his writings on history, art, and culture have appeared in other newspapers from the Wall Street Journal to the Dallas Morning News.