Pharoah Sanders: Welcome To Love (180g) (Limited Edition)
Welcome To Love (180g) (Limited Edition)
2
LPs
LP (Long Play)
Die gute alte Vinyl - Langspielplatte.
Derzeit nicht erhältlich.
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Vinyl liefern wir innerhalb Deutschlands immer portofrei.
- Label: Tidal Waves, 1990
- Erscheinungstermin: 27.3.2020
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Das Album, das als Sanders' bestes Album aus seiner Zeit des Umdenkens gefeiert wird, ist in vielerlei Hinsicht eine Hommage an Coltranes Ballads-Album von 1961, das jedoch ganz und gar Pharoahs Handschrift trägt. Hier erkundet der Hörer die sanftere Seite von Pharoah Sanders... ein Jazz-Gigant, der subtil und gelassen kommuniziert. Seine unglaubliche Technik zeigt sich nicht in rasenden Läufen, sondern in der exquisiten Wahl der Noten, dem Kennzeichen eines herausragenden Kommunikators, wie er in der Kunst der Ballade demonstriert wird. Sanders kommuniziert mit einer Wärme und einem klanglichen Zentrum, das unter den heutigen Spielern ungewöhnlich ist und sich mit den vielen Sopransaxofon-Größen vor ihm messen kann.
»Welcome to Love« ist eine ideale Einführung in Sanders und ein Sprungbrett zu den originelleren, spirituellen Stücken des Saxophonisten. Wenn Sie mit Sanders' spirituellen Avantgarde-Werken vertrauter sind und dieses nicht kennen, werden Sie von dem fabelhaften Klang überrascht sein, der hier geboten wird.
First time on vinyl (2XLP set) - Featuring rare 1990 French Recordings - Comes with Japanese bonus track from the same session - Deluxe 180g Double vinyl edition, limited to 500 copies, //
Pharoah ›Farrell‹ Sanders (born 1940) is a leading figure in the world of jazz and one of the last living legends with connections to players like Sun Ra and John Coltrane. His tenor saxophone playing has earned him royal status amongst free jazz players, critics and collectors. Originally Sanders was interested in urban blues music, but his high school teacher exposed him to jazz and this took Farrell in an entirely new direction. Once completing high school Sanders quickly packed his belongings and headed to Oakland, where he got a chance to work with musicians of high caliber such as saxophone players Sonny Simmons and Dewey Redman (who were both later to be major forces in new jazz and free jazz). Soon the young Pharoah would meet John Coltrane and would feel being attracted to the life as a professional musician.
By the early sixties Sanders moved to New York where the major jazz scene was happening. Here he'd spent most his time honing his skills at rehearsals with Sun Ra_.sadly he was not making much money with the Arkestra and soon found himself living on the streets, trying to stay up all night playing and then scrounging for money during the day, often selling blood to eat. Sanders recorded his debut album for ESP soon after, but it wasn't until he started playing with his old friend John Coltrane that he would fully unleash the fury of his saxophone on the world of free jazz.
The records Pharoah Sanders played on for Coltrane laid the foundation of what was to come for both the world of free jazz and for Sanders as a musician. After Coltrane's tragic death Sanders would record further with Alice Coltrane, John's widow, on the album Karma (1969 - Impulse!), which is universally accepted as Sanders' masterpiece. Along with musicians Alice Coltrane and singer Leon Thomas, Sanders helped to create the genre of spiritual jazz. On this (harder to find) album we are presenting you today (Welcome to Love) you'll find sublime French recordings (recorded in 1990-released in 1991). Here, Sanders plays with an all-star line-up consisting of Stafford James (Sun Ra) on bass, William Henderson (Roy Ayers) on piano & Eccleston W. Wainwright on drums.
On Welcome to Love, the master saxophonist plays straight-up jazz, and the result is a gorgeous collection of ballads where you can really feel Sanders' enormous self-reflection and homesickness. Sanders is famous for getting sounds out of his sax that no else can, but on these recordings he treats the songs with reverent lyricism on both tenor and soprano_each song is infused with a subtle emotional quality that simply does not let go. Hailed as Sanders' finest albums from his re-thinking period, in many ways, the album is a tribute to Coltrane's Ballads album of 1961 but with Pharoah's print marked all over it. Here the listener explores the gentler side of Pharoah Sanders_a jazz giant who is communicating subtly and serenely. His incredible technique is displayed not in furious runs but in exquisite note choices, the mark of the outstanding communicator as demonstrated in the art of the ballad. Sanders communicates with a warmth and tonal center that is unusual among present players and compares favorably to the many soprano sax greats that have preceded him.
Welcome to Love is an ideal introduction to Sanders and a stepping-stone to the saxophonist's more inventive, spiritual pieces. If you're more familiar with Sanders' spiritual avant-garde works and not aware of this one, you'll be plenty surprised with the fabulous sound represented here.
»Welcome to Love« ist eine ideale Einführung in Sanders und ein Sprungbrett zu den originelleren, spirituellen Stücken des Saxophonisten. Wenn Sie mit Sanders' spirituellen Avantgarde-Werken vertrauter sind und dieses nicht kennen, werden Sie von dem fabelhaften Klang überrascht sein, der hier geboten wird.
Product Information
First time on vinyl (2XLP set) - Featuring rare 1990 French Recordings - Comes with Japanese bonus track from the same session - Deluxe 180g Double vinyl edition, limited to 500 copies, //
Pharoah ›Farrell‹ Sanders (born 1940) is a leading figure in the world of jazz and one of the last living legends with connections to players like Sun Ra and John Coltrane. His tenor saxophone playing has earned him royal status amongst free jazz players, critics and collectors. Originally Sanders was interested in urban blues music, but his high school teacher exposed him to jazz and this took Farrell in an entirely new direction. Once completing high school Sanders quickly packed his belongings and headed to Oakland, where he got a chance to work with musicians of high caliber such as saxophone players Sonny Simmons and Dewey Redman (who were both later to be major forces in new jazz and free jazz). Soon the young Pharoah would meet John Coltrane and would feel being attracted to the life as a professional musician.
By the early sixties Sanders moved to New York where the major jazz scene was happening. Here he'd spent most his time honing his skills at rehearsals with Sun Ra_.sadly he was not making much money with the Arkestra and soon found himself living on the streets, trying to stay up all night playing and then scrounging for money during the day, often selling blood to eat. Sanders recorded his debut album for ESP soon after, but it wasn't until he started playing with his old friend John Coltrane that he would fully unleash the fury of his saxophone on the world of free jazz.
The records Pharoah Sanders played on for Coltrane laid the foundation of what was to come for both the world of free jazz and for Sanders as a musician. After Coltrane's tragic death Sanders would record further with Alice Coltrane, John's widow, on the album Karma (1969 - Impulse!), which is universally accepted as Sanders' masterpiece. Along with musicians Alice Coltrane and singer Leon Thomas, Sanders helped to create the genre of spiritual jazz. On this (harder to find) album we are presenting you today (Welcome to Love) you'll find sublime French recordings (recorded in 1990-released in 1991). Here, Sanders plays with an all-star line-up consisting of Stafford James (Sun Ra) on bass, William Henderson (Roy Ayers) on piano & Eccleston W. Wainwright on drums.
On Welcome to Love, the master saxophonist plays straight-up jazz, and the result is a gorgeous collection of ballads where you can really feel Sanders' enormous self-reflection and homesickness. Sanders is famous for getting sounds out of his sax that no else can, but on these recordings he treats the songs with reverent lyricism on both tenor and soprano_each song is infused with a subtle emotional quality that simply does not let go. Hailed as Sanders' finest albums from his re-thinking period, in many ways, the album is a tribute to Coltrane's Ballads album of 1961 but with Pharoah's print marked all over it. Here the listener explores the gentler side of Pharoah Sanders_a jazz giant who is communicating subtly and serenely. His incredible technique is displayed not in furious runs but in exquisite note choices, the mark of the outstanding communicator as demonstrated in the art of the ballad. Sanders communicates with a warmth and tonal center that is unusual among present players and compares favorably to the many soprano sax greats that have preceded him.
Welcome to Love is an ideal introduction to Sanders and a stepping-stone to the saxophonist's more inventive, spiritual pieces. If you're more familiar with Sanders' spiritual avant-garde works and not aware of this one, you'll be plenty surprised with the fabulous sound represented here.
- Tracklisting
- Mitwirkende
Die Hörproben gehören zum Artikel Pharoah Sanders (1940-2022): Welcome To Love (CD). Das Tracklisting kann bei diesem Artikel ggf. abweichen.
LP
- 1 You Don't Know What Love Is
- 2 The Nearness Of You
- 3 My One And Only Love
- 4 I Want To Talk About You
- 5 Soul Eyes
LP
- 1 Nancy (With The Laughing Face)
- 2 Polka Dots And Moonbeams
- 3 Say It (Over And Over Again)
- 4 Lament
- 5 The Bird Song
- 6 Moonlight In Vermont
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