 Although introduced as a protégé of John Coltrane and touted by many as  his heir apparent, reedman Pharoah Sanders quickly proved his own man.  His shared interest in the "cosmic" music of Coltrane's final period  belies the fact that Sanders frequently plays with an unhurried sense of  peace and satisfaction rarely found in his mentor's music. His use of  space, African and Asian motifs and instruments, and simple, repetitive  melodies also pointed the way for jazz, rock, and new age musicians in  the '70s and '80s, while his sometimes raucous use of harsh, shrieking  runs influenced many of jazz's most adventurous saxophonists.
Although introduced as a protégé of John Coltrane and touted by many as  his heir apparent, reedman Pharoah Sanders quickly proved his own man.  His shared interest in the "cosmic" music of Coltrane's final period  belies the fact that Sanders frequently plays with an unhurried sense of  peace and satisfaction rarely found in his mentor's music. His use of  space, African and Asian motifs and instruments, and simple, repetitive  melodies also pointed the way for jazz, rock, and new age musicians in  the '70s and '80s, while his sometimes raucous use of harsh, shrieking  runs influenced many of jazz's most adventurous saxophonists. The centerpiece of Karma  is the marathon half-hour octet recording "The Creator Has a Master  Plan." Although the track features a warm vocal by Leon Thomas, its true  feature artist for almost the entire length is Sanders, who carries the  melody, feel, and improvisation firmly on his shoulders. All of  Sanders's key elements--Afro-centric spiritualism, sweeping use of mood  from long, relaxed intervals to frenetic cacophony, and a deep sense of  melody and rhythm--are in evidence. The album's religious feeling is  cemented by the album's closer, "Colors," which serves as a deeply felt  invocation. --Fred Goodman
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1 comment:
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