Home » Jazz Articles » Live Review » Tyshawn Sorey and Sandbox Percussion at 92NY
Tyshawn Sorey and Sandbox Percussion at 92NY

Courtesy Richard Termine
This was a salute to a jazz giant that eschewed the artist’s best-known jazz playing, in favor of his legacy as a composer and leader of the all-percussion M'Boom.
92NY
"Max Roach at 100"
New York City
February 21, 2025
Serious and uncompromising artist that he was, drummer

Max Roach
drums1925 - 2007

Tyshawn Sorey
drumsb.1980
Roach was much more than a great jazz drummer, of course, and the evening succeeded beautifully in spotlighting lesser-known aspects of his artistry. Sorey, a musical renaissance man in his own right, focused on Roach as composer, and as leader of M'Boom, his 1980s all-percussion ensemble.
True to Sorey's vision for the show, even the most conventional-jazz portion of the eveningan opening trio set of Roach compositions, played as a continuous suitewas far from jazzy in any mainstream sense. For the opener "Sunday Afternoon," Sorey chose to forego the conventional drumming of the Roach recordingfrom the album It's Time (Impulse!, 1962) credited to Max Roach, His Chorus and Orchestra. Instead, he sustained sweeping washes of drumming that barely settled into a groove. Pianist

Aaron Diehl
pianoThe trio then segued into "Almost Like Me," whose initial tighter structure soon gave way to exchanges between Diehl, playing fragmented phrases and rippling waves of notes, and an occasionally explosive Sorey. The piano-bass dueling continued in the concluding "It's Time." But in place of the arrangement on the Roach recording, in which the master drummer repeatedly played unaccompanied solos between the song's repeating piano figure, Sorey and Diehl playedand battledtogether throughout.
At the end of "It's Time," members of Sandbox Percussion joined in briefly, before the Sorey trio exited and the uninterrupted set became an all-percussion affair. Over three piecesone of which, "Morning/Midday," drew from the M'Boom repertoirethe quartet was remarkably subdued for a bunch of young percussionists. The music only occasionally rose in rhythmic intensity, as with a furious xylophone and drum kit duet in the middle of "Joy Boy"a

Julius Eastman
composer / conductor1940 - 1990
For much of its half hour, the Sandbox set was dominated by the likes of serene vibraphone, both malleted and bowed, and gentle cymbal washes. This was music less concerned with rhythmic pyrotechnics than the gentle sonorities of the diverse instrumentation, which included shakers, gongs, a full drum kit, and upright chimes.
The trio rejoined Sandbox for the final third, which featured a new Sorey composition co-commissioned by 92NY, New Jersey Performing Arts Center, and the Library Of Congress. "Cogitations" seeks to champion Roach, Sorey wrote in the program notes, by combining "hand-in-hand, spontaneous composition and the formality of structure."
True to Sorey's goal, it was hard in places to discern what was written and what improvised. "Cogitations," like the Sandbox solo set, began with disparate sounds, this time including the tinkle of piano and rumbles from the bass. Sorey's sonic palette eventually widened to include tom-toms that he detuned in mid-set to emit a different, more thudding tone.
The septet's set eventually built to the blazing polyrhythmic peak one expects from a stage full of drummers, led by Sorey's full-set cannonades, before dying down to a single sound the intermittent pealing of the upright chimes. After a few seconds of silence, Sorey said a simple "thank you" and this singular and satisfying evening was over.
For Roach aficionados, Sorey's tribute sounded the starting pistol for other one-hundredth-year celebrations soon in New York. Those include the tribute by

Terri Lyne Carrington
drumsb.1965

Abbey Lincoln
vocals1930 - 2010
Tags
Live Review
Tyshawn Sorey
Paul Reynolds
United States
New York
New York City
Max Roach
Aaron Diehl
Julius Eastman
New Jersey Performing Arts Center
Library of Congress
Terri Lyne Carrington
Smoke Jazz & Supper Club
We Insist!
Abbey Lincoln
Comments
PREVIOUS / NEXT
Tyshawn Sorey Concerts
Dec
6
Sat

Peter Evans Being & Becoming
Solar MythPhiladelphia, PA
Dec
7
Sun

Peter Evans Being & Becoming
Solar MythPhiladelphia, PA
Dec
12
Fri

Tyshawn Sorey Trio
Firehouse 12New Haven, CT
Feb
6
Fri

Tyshawn Sorey: Members, Don't Git Weary
Zellerbach TheatrePhiladelphia, PA
Support All About Jazz

Go Ad Free!
To maintain our platform while developing new means to foster jazz discovery and connectivity, we need your help. You can become a sustaining member for as little as $20 and in return, we'll immediately hide those pesky ads plus provide access to future articles for a full year. This winning combination vastly improves your AAJ experience and allow us to vigorously build on the pioneering work we first started in 1995. So enjoy an ad-free AAJ experience and help us remain a positive beacon for jazz by making a donation today.
New York City
Concert Guide | Venue Guide | Local Businesses
| More...
