Pharoah Sanders, one of the most creative figures in jazz, who had embraced the influence of African and Indian music, died on Saturday. He was 81 years old.
His record label Luaka Bop said in a statement that he “passed away peacefully” in Los Angeles, surrounded by his family and loved ones.
He had explored the saxophone to the limits of its timbre, drawing on Eastern, Indian and African traditions to transform his music into a mystical experience.
With his saxophones which he manhandled, using mouthpieces by the hundreds by dint of gnawing them, shouting in the bell of his instruments or making them vibrate under the power of his continuous breath, he widened even more the horizons of free jazz, movement born at the end of the 1950s which freed improvisations from harmonic constraints.
Pharoah Sanders is considered one of the heirs of the great John Coltrane, who died prematurely in 1967, and whose last album he had signed some aggressive solos. Live in Japanreleased posthumously in 1973.
But Sanders, who also played alto and soprano saxophone, was not unanimous and never reached the popularity of Coltrane or Ornette Coleman, who nevertheless saw in him “probably the best tenor saxophone player in the world “.
The sound he produced, evolving between stridency and voluptuousness, consecrated him as one of the masters of spiritual jazz. This current, at the end of the sixties, wanted to bring together societies divided by racial, social and political tensions on a sonorous land where peace and happiness for all would be preached in a joyful religious syncretism.
Iconic sound The Creator Has a Master Plan, piece of nearly 33 minutes taken from his album “Karma” (1969), has become one of its hymns: we hear him there – and we see him there, his eyes almost rolling back – entering a trance where he seems to exorcise his demons before reaching a form of ecstasy.
spiritual journey
Farrell “Pharoah” Sanders was born on October 13, 1940 in Little Rock, Arkansas to a modest Baptist family. He played the clarinet in the orchestra of his school reserved for blacks then frequented the blues clubs of the city, accompanying visiting virtuosos like Junior Parker. In 1959, he moved to Oakland (California), where he joined various rhythm and blues groups under the name Little Rock.
He meets John Coltrane, his idol, who plays in town with the quintet of Miles Davis. He then had a fixed idea, to go to New York, where he arrived in 1961. He sold his blood there to survive, slept in the subway until he met Sun Ra, a mysterious pianist and jazz composer, passionate about Egyptology. and UFOs.
Sun Ra and Coltrane integrate him into their group and he takes on a new name, Pharoah. After Coltrane’s death, Pharoah Sanders will continue to record as a leader.
“My sound is serious: many of the young people have a bright sound, but I like it to be serious with more roundness, depth and feeling”, he described in 1996 in an interview with the San Francisco Chronicle.
Sanders, recognizable among all with his long goatee turned white and his fez, made a brief foray into pop in 1971 with his album Thembiin honor of his wife.
But it is above all outside the United States that he finds his inspiration. In 1969, he drew inspiration from African mysticism, particularly Sufism, in Jewels of Thought. Years later, he collaborated in The Trance of Seven Colors with Mahmoud Guinia, Moroccan musician master of Gnawa music. In 1996, his album Message from Home explores traditional Ghanaian music.
He is also interested in Indian musicians like Bismillah Khan who introduced the shana, a kind of oboe played in Indian processions, and Ravi Shankar, who popularized the sitar.
“I want to take people on a spiritual journey; I want to shake them up, stimulate them. Then bring them back to earth, serene,” he said.