词条 | Karma (Pharoah Sanders album) |
释义 |
| name = Karma | type = Studio album | artist = Pharoah Sanders | cover = Karma (Pharoah Sanders).jpg | alt = | released = 1969 | recorded = February 14 & 19, 1969 at RCA Studios, New York City | venue = | studio = | genre = Avant-garde jazz, spiritual jazz, free jazz[1] | length = 37:30 | label = Impulse! Records | producer = | prev_title = Izipho Zam (My Gifts) | prev_year = 1969 | next_title = Jewels of Thought | next_year = 1969 }}{{Album reviews | rev1 = Allmusic | rev1Score = {{Rating|5|5}} [2] | rev2 = Rolling Stone | rev2Score = (favorable) [3] }} Karma is a 1969 jazz recording by the American tenor saxophonist Pharoah Sanders. BackgroundThe social and political upheavals of the 1960s have been cited as a major factor in the emergence of a new stylistic trend in jazz, with a very different emphasis to the forms of the music which emerged earlier. Many of the artists involved in the making of this new music, variously called "free jazz", "the new thing", or "energy music", recorded for the Impulse! label. Ashley Kahn writes that several musicians, often those who had either played with or been influenced by John Coltrane, such as his widow Alice Coltrane, Archie Shepp, Pharoah Sanders, and Leon Thomas, began exploring new thematic and musical ideas, often associated with non-western religious and musical traditions.[4] Although the ideological strain was much more obvious in Shepp's music than Sanders', the musical influence was just as pronounced: virtually all of his recordings as a leader from this late 1960s/early 1970s period contain some kind of African percussion, and other non-western features such as Leon Thomas' distinctive yodelling, apparently learnt from African pygmies. Album informationKarma is Sanders' third recording as a leader, and is among a number of spiritually-themed albums released on the Impulse! record label in the late 1960s/early 1970s. Although it is followed by the brief "Colors", the album's 32-minute-long "The Creator Has a Master Plan", co-composed by Sanders with vocalist Leon Thomas. Some see this piece as a kind of sequel to Sanders' mentor John Coltrane's legendary 1964 recording "A Love Supreme" (whose opening it echoes in a muscular yet lyrical opening "prelude", with Sanders playing over a suspended, non-rhythmic backdrop, before the entrance of a bass figure which underpins much of the piece). It features Sanders on tenor sax, along with two of his most important collaborators, the aforementioned Leon Thomas and pianist Lonnie Liston Smith, as well as a supporting cast of musicians who were major musicians in their own right: flautist James Spaulding; French-horn player Julius Watkins; bassist Reggie Workman, who had played with Coltrane earlier in the 1960s; second bassist Richard Davis; drummer Billy Hart, and percussionist Nathaniel Bettis. While later recorded versions of the tune, some of which featured Sanders and Thomas, became shorter and more lyrical, this original contains extended free instrumental sections, particularly the third section, where the saxophonist demonstrates some of the techniques which build his distinctive sound, including a split-reed technique, overblowing, and multiphonics, which give a screeching sound. On the whole, however, this was quite laid-back and accessible for a free-jazz record (compared to, say, Coltrane's Ascension), with its mantra-like chant/melody, accessible, loping groove (which has since been sampled and covered by other artists—Sanders himself re-uses it on "Heart Is a Melody of Time (Hikoro's Song)" from his album Heart is a Melody) and optimistic, spiritually-themed lyrics. The unusual textures also give an impression of the exotic, with the employment of a French horn and flute, adding an almost orchestral tinge not often found in jazz, as well as Leon Thomas' characteristic yodelling and a variety of percussion instruments. Despite its length, it actually achieved mainstream FM radio airplay, surely the closest the avant-garde movement came to a "hit", apart from the cult classic "A Love Supreme", and its popularity with acid jazz and hip-hop artists (see below) attests to its continuing popular status. The influence of the "spiritual jazz" movement, and Sanders' involvement in particular, can be seen in Sarah Webster Fabio's 1976 lyrics to "Jujus: Alchemy of the Blues":
Track listing
Personnel
References1. ^{{cite web | url={{Allmusic|class=album|id=r146898||pure_url=yes}} | title=Allmusic review | work=Allmusic | publisher=All Media Guide | first= | last= | date= | accessdate=2011-06-16}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Karma (Pharoah Sanders Album)}}2. ^{{cite web | url={{Allmusic|class=album|id=r146898||pure_url=yes}} | title=Allmusic review | work=Allmusic | publisher=All Media Guide | first= | last= | date= | accessdate=2011-06-16}} 3. ^{{cite journal |last=Winner |first=Langdon |author-link=Langdon Winner|date=18 October 1969 |title=Records |journal=Rolling Stone |volume= |issue=44 |pages=42 |location=San Francisco |publisher=Straight Arrow Publishers, Inc. }} 4. ^Ashley Kahn, The House That Trane Built: The Story of Impulse Records. (2006) W. W. Norton, {{ISBN|0-393-05879-4}} 4 : Pharoah Sanders albums|1969 albums|Impulse! Records albums|Free jazz albums |
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