Few musicians, if any, can match it. The volume is so high, the tempo so fast and the tension so thick, Pharoah Sanders puts down his saxophone, screams and then returns to it for his sprawling improvisation.

[Listen to the podcast of saxophone giant Pharoah Sanders' music]

It's a moment his audience expects. The saxophone innovator has come to symbolize the flammability and spirituality of what's called the jazz avant-garde. But his glorified role in John Coltrane's quintet of the 1960s is so mythologized, many people overlook Sanders' vision beyond it. 

Now 65, Sanders, with disarming eyes and a chinstrap beard, continues to make some wrenching, hulking and, at the same time, serene music. His Bay Area reputation continues to grow, ever since he moved to Oakland from Little Rock, Ark., in 1959. A Los Angeles transplant for the past few years, he returns to San Francisco for a solo concert at Grace Cathedral on Friday -- his second there in 18 years. 

The event, presented by SFJazz as part of its spring series, has a natural fit in the hall. There's a seven-second reverberation that should amplify his prayerful tone just fine, judging by a tape someone made of his 1988 solo there.