Pharoah Sanders at Catalina’s Bar and Grill
by jazzcat on Aug.20, 2007, under News
Slide Show
Drum roll please. Babatunde Lea lays down a red carpet of
beats as the great Pharoah approaches the stage. Two of LA’s finest also join
in to contribute to the loveliness that is about to take place, pianist William
Henderson, known to some as Kaman and bass player Tony Dumas. These cats round
out the rhythm section perfectly as they begin to break the stage in for the
second set.
William Henderson lays down a bed of roses and from the
darkness appears a figure, holding his horn and shaking the bells. The rhythm
is a melodic mantra and the horn is the poet. His sound on tenor is rich and
operating in a register that speaks his name. Pharoah Sanders paints the
landscape of “Lawrence of Arabia”, coming back from the desert unscathed and
blessing the nonbelievers with a musical language that heals the souls.
Dark shades, white hair and a horn that screams ecstasy, a
description that belongs to no other. He listens as the members is his rhythm
speak to him. Out of nowhere a wind rises. Two gigantic tambourines create the
impression of the eye of the storm. The elements of a world entrenched in
turmoil, yet this music is the spirit, the power, that protects us and with
faith, we know that everything is going to be all right.
Tony Dumas sounds so wonderful tonight. He has space and is
freedom of his solo is expressed in an Arabian mysticism that is quite
captivating. I have seen him in many different settings and the richness of
this environment is perfect for him. They play John Coltrane’s “India” and
Pharoah creates some sounds that I have never heard before. If this were a
clearing in the meadow, in the forest, in the night, a thousand pairs of eyes
would be glowing upon us from the distance. The music travels like a rapid
flowing river that everyone is pleasantly swept away by.
There are those who have an original sound and there are the
rest. Affiliations do wonderful things. Forever are we touched by the things
and the emotions that we experience in life and in music, this concept is a
welcome organism that mutates between the lives of musicians and contributes to
the creative combustion that happens when the music freely takes flight and
metamorphically changes into new directions.
Pharoah’s ballads are sweet and a tender rhythm only
enhances the charm. Have you ever seen Babatunde work the drums and the bongos
at the same time? A polyrhythmic master! This cat is just recovering from
shoulder and knee surgery but, you wouldn’t know it as he doesn’t miss a beat.
Pharoah takes the Trane home with “Giant Steps” and encores with the
historical, magical Mantra, “A Love Supreme, A Love Supreme, A Love Supreme”.
Much music, much love, much respect!
LeRoy Downs