ファラオ・サンダースが『The Creator Has a Master Plan』で何を意味したのか
Faith, Freedom, and the Sound of the Spirit
ラフィ・マーサー
Someone asked me recently what Pharoah Sanders meant by The Creator Has a Master Plan. It’s one of those tracks whose title already feels like a sermon, but the message inside it runs even deeper. Released in 1969 on his album Karma, it was both prayer and protest — an act of spiritual defiance wrapped in improvisation.
The track stretches for over thirty minutes, unfolding like a sunrise. Sanders’ saxophone doesn’t play melodies so much as emotions: wails, whispers, cries of faith and fury. Beneath him, Leon Thomas’ voice chants and scats, invoking hope even as the world outside burned. This was America in the aftermath of assassinations, protests, and war — and Sanders was responding not with slogans, but with breath.
The Creator Has a Master Plan isn’t about doctrine; it’s about endurance. It’s the sound of someone trying to believe in grace amid chaos. Where Fela used rhythm to challenge power, Sanders used sound to reach beyond it — a reminder that liberation isn’t only political; it’s spiritual.
In a listening bar today, the track still feels alive. Play it loud and the room changes shape: the bass becomes heartbeat, the percussion a mantra, the horn a form of prayer. It demands patience. You don’t just hear it — you surrender to it.
So when people ask what Pharoah Sanders meant, the answer is this: he meant that sound could be salvation. That even in disorder, there’s design. That listening deeply is its own kind of faith.
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