
Sonny Rollins, saxophonist and one of the last survivors of jazz's golden age, has died at 95, El País reports.
ℹ️ Browser-based reading · AI studio voice coming soon
Sonny Rollins, the saxophonist widely regarded as one of the greatest improvisers in the history of jazz, has died at the age of 95, El País reported.
The Spanish newspaper described Rollins as a giant of the genre and a colossus of the saxophone — a towering figure whose career spanned decades and whose influence on the instrument and on improvisation itself remains unmatched.
Rollins was among the last surviving musicians to have emerged from jazz's golden age, a mid-twentieth-century period that produced many of the genre's most celebrated artists and recordings. His death marks the end of a direct living link to that era.
No details regarding the cause of death or his location at the time were included in the wire report. Further information is expected to emerge in the hours ahead.