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Sam Newsome: To Play or Not to Play the Soprano
ByI have often equated the process of switching from the tenor to the soprano to being like "jumping off of a cliff and having to grow wings on the way down." Many of my fellow musicians thought my decision was drasticand it was. It has been my experience that if you think about something for too long without taking action, you'll eventually talk yourself out of itor worse, someone else will. Sometimes you have to just do it.
The soprano is probably still, today, one of the most enigmatic of all the saxophones. Since most people who play the soprano are alto and tenor players who double on the instrument, people hardly get a chance to hear the instrument's true sound potential. Mind you, there are plenty of saxophonists who double on it well, but when you hear the sound quality of someone who plays it as their primary instrument, you get to hear another layer of the instrument's sound. Sometimes it even sounds like a different instrument.
The first time I put on a

Steve Lacy
saxophone, soprano1934 - 2004

Sidney Bechet
saxophone, soprano1897 - 1959
Several years ago I had an interesting conversation with Gerry Teekens, the producer and founder of Criss Cross Records, the label with which I recorded my first CD, SAM I AM. I told him that I had, for artistic reasons, decided to stop playing the tenor saxophone and wanted to make the soprano my main instrument. His response was classic. "Why would you want to do that? You sound just like

Hank Mobley
saxophone, tenor1930 - 1986

Sonny Rollins
saxophoneb.1930

Jane Ira Bloom
saxophone, sopranoLater during that same conversation, he told me that switching to the soprano was risky because the soprano is a very limited instrument. Many people hold this opinion, but the reason people feel this way is that when they hear the soprano played, they aren't hearing the result of players having spent three to four hours a day over the course of several years devoted solely to developing a personal sound and approach on the soprano saxophone. Even though there are a handful of saxophonists who have carved out a niche on the instrument, it is still a relatively small number compared to the innovations that have been documented on other saxophones. Try to imagine what our perception of the tenor saxophone would be like without the diversity of approaches from

Lester Young
saxophone1909 - 1959

Coleman Hawkins
saxophone, tenor1904 - 1969

John Coltrane
saxophone1926 - 1967

Stan Getz
saxophone, tenor1927 - 1991

Albert Ayler
saxophone, tenor1936 - 1970
In the beginning stages of playing the soprano exclusively, I, too, felt some of the limitations of the instrument. The most noticeable was not having that deep lower register that one takes for granted when playing the alto, tenor and baritone saxophones. But over time I have discovered that this can be overcome by developing other areas of the instrument. The three techniques that I have found to be the most effective in achieving this are through the use of the altissimo register, the use of multiphonics and the use of quarter-tone fingerings. Having developed my altissimo on the soprano, I now have a four-octave range, which in some ways enables me to approach the instrument like a flute. Having developed my cross-fingering technique (another name for alternate fingerings), I'm now able effectively to incorporate multiphonics and quarter-tones into my music. Multiphonics are great because you can harmonize your own notes, giving them more weight and presence. Mastering quarter-tone fingerings gives you not only twice as many notes to work with within an octave, but enables you to play non-Western scales and melodies. Mind you, these things are easier said than done. Examples of these techniques can be heard on my solo CDs: Monk Abstractions (s/r, 2006) and the soon-to-be released Blue Soliloquy: Microtonal Explorations of the Blues.
Will the soprano ever be viewed with the same reverence as other instruments? I guess only time will tell. Steve Lacy said that there was a time when the only two modern jazz soprano saxophonists were John Coltrane and himself. Today, that is no longer the case. People often forget that the first jazz saxophone soloist was soprano saxophonist Sidney Bechet, who rivaled

Louis Armstrong
trumpet and vocals1901 - 1971
I feel very optimistic about the future. I do foresee a day when junior high and high school band students will have the option to play the soprano, rather than just being limited to the alto, tenor and baritone saxophones. As instrument makers continue to improve the instrument, composers and musicians continue to write and perform music written for the instrument. I see a new day, when the soprano will be on top, not just in register, but also in reverence!
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Sam Newsome Concerts
Ingardens Festival
First Street Green Cultural ParkNew York, NY
Ingardens Festival
First Street Green Cultural ParkNew York, NY
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