Robert Christgau: Dean of American Rock Critics

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Pharoah Sanders

  • Message from Home [Verve, 1996] A-
  • Save Our Children [Verve, 1998] Neither
  • The Impulse Story [Impulse, 2006] ***

Consumer Guide Reviews:

Message from Home [Verve, 1996]
Where Sanders's serviceable if eerie new collection of Coltrane replicas is pure middlebrow market ploy, this putatively commercial move ventures into the unknown. With his fabulous sound, un-American activities, and grandly simple musical ideas, the man was made for Bill Laswell's world-jazz strategems. Lacking an "Upper Egypt" or "The Creator Has a Master Plan," he establishes his leisurely command, then immerses in an "Ocean Song" that is more former than latter before going out on the two friendliest, wildest, and most African of the six cuts. These highlight old Laswell hands Foday Musa Suso and Aiyb Dieng, and by the time they're over, you'll forget whether you remember the tunes. A-

Save Our Children [Verve, 1998] Neither

The Impulse Story [Impulse, 2006]
The tenor legend had a huge sound and Leon Thomas, but I gotta say it: "The Creator Had a Master Plan" would have been more mythic at half its 32:45 ("Upper Egypt and Lower Egypt," "Spiritual Blessing") ***