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Spirits

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Download links and information about Spirits by Pharoah Sanders, Adam Rudolph, Hamid Drake. This album was released in 2000 and it belongs to Jazz, Avant Garde Jazz, Crossover Jazz, World Music, Latin genres. It contains 10 tracks with total duration of 01:00:19 minutes.

Artist: Pharoah Sanders, Adam Rudolph, Hamid Drake
Release date: 2000
Genre: Jazz, Avant Garde Jazz, Crossover Jazz, World Music, Latin
Tracks: 10
Duration: 01:00:19
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Sunrise 19:12
2. Morning In Soweto 5:00
3. The Thousand Petalled Lotus 6:59
4. I and Thou 2:05
5. Uma Lake 3:14
6. Ancient Peoples 7:35
7. Calling to the Luminous Beings 5:54
8. Roundhouse 2:28
9. Molimo 2:44
10. Sunset 5:08

Details

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This in-concert recording at the Montreal Jazz Festival is a continual performance that acts as a suite in three basic parts, with Sanders on tenor sax, wood flutes, and percussion, helped by multipercussionists Hamid Drake and Adam Rudolph. The music is as the title suggests: spiritual, multi-ethnic, mostly serene, and quite improvisationally derived. It's a beautiful statement from Sanders, very similar to the music Yusef Lateef has played (with Rudolph and Eternal Wind) and different than his more major-label efforts. "Sunrise," running over 19 minutes, begins the hour-long program. Soft drone tones set up tenor meditations, slight percussive inserts, mbira and driftwood wordless vocals, and soulful chanting, then move back to tenor musings with bells, and visceral, gutteral chants. "Morning in Soweto" and "The Thousand Petaled Lotus" segue together with hand drum and tenor groove in a manner reminiscent of Thelonious Monk's "Well, You Needn't" nestled in the Sudan! The next movement of the suite is in five parts. A demure gong, animal growls, and moans from "I & Thou" easily move into free and repeated wood flute phrases and insistent hand percussion as a driving force on "Uma Lake." "Molimo" is a separate entity, as counterpointed wood flutes hoot like owls with sexual overtones and rattling percussion. Fans of Sanders will be easily able to connect this music with his past glories, but it could be a portent of bigger things, and bigger ensembles, to come. Recommended. ~ Michael G. Nastos, Rovi