Sahara

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (72 ratings)
Sahara album cover
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 5   Total Length: 47:46

eMusic Review 0

Avatar Image
Thomas Bartlett

eMusic Contributor

10.14.09
Longtime Coltrane pianist’s finest moment as a bandleader.
2006 | Label: Fantasy Records

As John Coltrane's longtime pianist, McCoy Tyner developed a volcanic, eruptive sound, instantly recognizable by his dense, blockish, two-handed chords. Tyner also had great facility with his right hand, and would often play speedy single-note lines, but at his explosive height, the intent never seemed to be melodic, but rather textural, building up tones into a wall of sound. 1972's "Sahara," with Sonny Fortune, Calvin Hill and Alphonse Mouzon, is one of his finest as a leader.

Write a Review 6 Member Reviews

Please register before you review a release. Register

user avatar

His Best

mailman

Probably Tyner's finest recording and his first for Orrin Keepnews Milstone label. Music of tremendous power and excitement. McCoy shows off all of his enormous talents on this one. Sonny Fortune is at his very best as well. This one is among the very best recordings of the 1970s. Essential!!!

user avatar

One of His Best

Biz5th

Classic piano, outstanding jazz.

user avatar

Classic and cutting edge

2nzfan

A classic album, and one that was cutting edge on release - and still sounds cutting edge today. This release belongs in any pure jazz fan's music library.

user avatar

Get this album. NOW

heddddged

There is little worth saying other than GET THIS ALBUM NOW best McCoy Tyner album, possibly best jazz album of the 70s

user avatar

A real masterpiece!

GregMoiseev

A must for eveyone in jazz.

user avatar

It will blow you away

Petrefax

Listening to this cd will blow you away. Sit back, open your mind and ears to the wonderfull cd. The track "Sahara" will take you on a journey so fantastic you will have to come back to it again and again.

Recommended Albums

They Say All Music Guide

After the death of John Coltrane, his longtime pianist McCoy Tyner was in something of a musical quandary. Keeping up with his mentor through the incredible explorations of the early ’60s, he seemed to have some difficulty navigating the even further out territories explored in the two or three years before Coltrane’s death in 1967. His subsequent albums as a leader were solid, enjoyable efforts but seemed oddly retrograde, as though he needed time to settle back and re-digest the information handed down to him. With Sahara, Tyner found the precise perfect “middle ground” on which to stand, more structured than late Coltrane, but exploding with a ferocity and freedom of sound that made it simply one of the greatest jazz recordings of the decade. None of the other members of his quartet ever sounded so inspired, so liberated as they do here. Sonny Fortune threatens to tear the roof off the joint on more than one occasion, Calvin Hill is more than rock-solid on bass, his roots arcing deeply into the earth, and as for Alphonse Mouzon, well, no one familiar with his later vapid meanderings in fusion would begin to recognize him here, so incendiary is his playing. And Tyner develops so much pure energy, channeled with such pinpoint precision, that one worries about the physical stability of any piano under such an assault. From the extraordinarily intense “Ebony Queen” through the ruminative solo “A Prayer for My Family, the equally intense “Rebirth,” and the concluding, side-long title track, there’s not a misstep to be heard. “Sahara,” over the course of its 23 minutes, covers vast ground, echoing the majesty and misery of the geographical area with percussion and flute interludes to some of Tyner’s very best playing on record. Even something that could have resulted in a mere exercise in exotica, his koto performance on “Valley of Life,” exudes both charm and commitment to the form. Tyner would go on to create several fine albums in the mid-’70s, but never again would he scale quite these heights. Sahara is an astonishingly good record and belongs in every jazz fan’s collection. – Brian Olewnick

more »