Jazz legend
Pharoah Sanders' one-of-a-kind, mosaical free jazz classic Thembi – not pressed
on vinyl since 1987 – is available once again via Impulse!/UMe. Originally
released in 1971, the Ed Michel and Bill Szymczyk-produced album is pressed on
black vinyl and housed in a high-quality wrapped jacket.
Thembi, named after Sanders' son and compiled from two sets
of sessions, captures the tenor saxophonist at his hyper-eclectic peak. And
that MO was captured literally as the musicians unloaded their instruments to
record the music. As organist Lonnie Liston Smith related in 2007, "We got
to the studio in California — Cecil McBee had to unpack his bass, the drummer had
to set up his drums, Pharoah had to unpack all of his horns. Everybody had
something to do, but the piano was just sitting there waiting." That was
the first time Smith touched an electric keyboard — and Sanders followed suit.
Not only did the tenor player pick up alto and soprano
horns, but other oddities like cow horns, fifes and a small African thumb piano
called the bailophone. Not only this, co-producers Michel and Szymczyk
revolutionarily made something more indebted to Sgt. Pepper than "So What?".
Their mixes teem with psychedelic, trippy effects — echo, reverb and phasing.
It all reflected Sanders' legendarily "outer limits" state of mind.
While its experimental sound naturally divided critics and
fans, time has been good to this unusual LP. In a retrospective review in 2011,
All About Jazz called it "unalloyed bliss from start to finish, a sweet
and lyrical evocation of Eastern mysticism." Revive Music noted its
"use of dozens of instruments, including the sounds of birds and the yelping
voices of humans," concluding "Thembi is a testament to the fact that
timeless classics are never attributed singularly to technique, but are instead
conceived of strong directional intent, a will, and love."
Thembi is both East and West Coast jazz — Side A and Side B
were recorded by two different ensembles in LA and New York, yet it isn't a
disjointed compilatory album. Instead, the love and light of Thembi creates a
complete feeling, from the percolating "Astral Travelling" to the
clattering "Bailophone Dance." For jazz fans looking for a little
more of a rough ride than polite dinner music, Thembi is a must-have in your
record collection.
Thembi Track Listing
Side A
1. Astral Traveling
2. Red, Black & Green
3. Thembi
SIDE B
1. Love
2. Morning Prayer
3. Bailophone Dance
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