Friday, August 31, 2012

2nd Chance: Sun Ra - Outer Reach Intensity-Energy (Stars That Shine Darkly Vol. 2)


Third of the list of hybrid versions of Stars That Shine Darkly, Outer Reach Intensity-Energy is a mysterious and remarkable album.  Side A contains Ra compositions unheard (or at least rarely heard) elsewhere, from live performances of the late 1970s and early 1980s; Side B is comprised of the amazing Sun Ra All-Stars performance "Stars That Shine Darkly vol. 2" of late 1983. 


415. [309]  Sun Ra

Stars That Shine Darkly Volume 2

Sun Ra (org); Ahmed Abdullah (tp -1); Michael Ray (tp); unidentified (tp); Marshall Allen (as); poss. Danny Davis (as); John Gilmore (ts); Eloe Omoe (as, bcl, cacl); James Jacson (bsn, Inf-d); Danny Ray Thompson (libf -2; bars); unidentified (d); unidentified (d).
Live performances, 1976-1984

          Outer Reach Intensity-Energy (Ra)
          Cosmos Rendezvous (Ra) -1
          Barbizon (Ra)
          The Double That… (Ra)
          The Ever Is… (Ra) -2

Saturn Gemini 9-1213-85, titled Stars That Shine Darkly Volume 2 or Outer Reach Intensity-Energy, was released in 1985 (mastered on September 13, 1985, according to the Variety Recording Studio log).  The tracks on Side A appear to have been recorded at several live performances in 1984.  The lineup does not correspond with any of the European tours, and in the United States, Ahmed Abdullah would have played only in the New York area.  It is not clear when Michael Ray would have worked with the Arkestra either (John Gilmore stated in an interview on October 13, 1984, that Ray had not worked with the Arkestra since early 1983; see Sun Ra Research #7).  Personnel identified by rlc with help from ct.

Chris Trent now suggests that these tracks were cut at various concerts in the late 1970s.  If "Outer Reach" includes Danny Davis on alto sax, as ct suggests, that would argue strongly in favor of 1978 or earlier.  the material with Abdullah could also come from 1975-1978.  Further research needed …

Cosmic Rendezvous


400. [297]  Sun Ra All Stars

Stars that Shine Darkly /
Stars that Shine Darkly Volume 2

Sun Ra (p, syn, voc); Don Cherry (pocket tp); Lester Bowie (tp); Marshall Allen (as, EVI, fl, ob); John Gilmore (ts, voc); Eloe Omoe (cacl); Archie Shepp (ss); Richard Davis (b); Clifford Jarvis (d); Philly Joe Jones (d); Famoudou Don Moye (d, Sun Percussion).
Montreux, Switzerland
between November 2 and 5, 1883

          Stars That Shine Darkly…
          (Ra) (part 1)
          Stars That Shine Darkly…
          (Ra) (part 2)

"Stars that Shine Darkly part 1" was first released in 1985 on Side A of the Saturn LP 10-11-85, Stars That Shine Darkly Volume 1.  This album has also been titled Hiroshima.  "Stars that Shine Darkly parrot 2" was first released in 1985 on Side B of the Saturn Gemini LP 9-1213-85, Stars that Shine Darkly Volume 2, also titled Outer Reach Intensity-Energy.  Mark Webber points out that there is also a hybrid Stars That Shine Darkly album with part 1 on Side A and part 2 on Side B.  Date and location from Ted Panken on a WKCR-FM broadcast.  Presence of Omoe noted by ct; Danny Ray Thompson confirms that Ra "augmented" the All-Stars on a couple of occasions.
from Campbell / Trent  The Earthly Recordings 2nd ed.






 Outer Reach Intensity-Energy (Stars That Shine Darkly Vol. 2)

1. Outer Reach Intensity-Energy   4:07
2. Cosmos Rendezvous   4:31
3. Barbizon   4:01
4. The Double That...   5:02
5. The Ever Is...   4:05

6. Stars That Shine Darkly   23:27


Many thanks to Zyxirion for sharing his FLAC rip with us.

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And Otherness:

Hiroshima (Stars That Shine Darkly)

&

Stars That Shine Darkly (hybrid)

Monday, August 27, 2012

2nd Chance: Sun Ra - Stars That Shine Darkly (1985)

In 1983 Ra came to Europe with a pretty impressive ensemble - from the Arkestra he brought Marshall Allen, John Gilmore, Richard Davis and Clifford Jarvis, then adding all-star guests Lester Bowie, Archie Shepp, Don Moye and Philly Joe Jones. The sound is generally good and there is a lot of variety in the material across the shows. More importantly, these concerts are different in character and style from regular Arkestra performances - in a very interesting way. It's a smallish ensemble and every detail counts, the two extra drummers Philly Joe Jones and Don Moye drive a lot of the material in their own way, and this very classy ensemble mutates to the accommodation of different languages with great success. The Arkestra alumni also flourish in this changed environment.
from an rermegacorp blurb

This ensemble was first heard on record on Sun Ra's LP Hiroshima (also released under the title Stars That Shine Darkly volume 1).  Two hybrid versions were also released shortly after. Stars That Shine Darkly is a hybrid featuring the two compositions featuring this same title.  Outer Reach Intensity-Energy is the 2nd hybrid release which includes Stars that Shine Darkly volume 2 as Side B and a collection of live material recorded during the 1970's and early 1980s making up Side A. 

Many thanks to Paul W for sharing his rip of this rare hybrid.

400. [297] Sun Ra All Stars

Stars that Shine Darkly /
Stars that Shine Darkly Volume 2

Sun Ra (p, syn, voc); Don Cherry (pocket tp); Eloe Omoe (cacl); Lester Bowie (tp); Marshall Allen (as, fl, ob, EVI); John Gilmore (ts, voc); Archie Shepp (ss); Richard Davis (b); Clifford Jarvis (d); Philly Joe Jones (d); Famoudou Don Moye (d, Sun Percussion).
Montreux, Switzerland,
between November 2 and 5, 1983

"Stars that Shine Darkly part 1" was first released in 1985 on Side A of the Saturn LP 10-11-85, Stars That Shine Darkly Volume 1.  This album has also been titled Hiroshima.  "Stars that Shine Darkly part 2" was first released in 1985 on Side B of the Saturn Gemini LP 9-1213-85, Stars that Shine Darkly Volume 2, also titled Outer Reach Intensity-Energy.  Mark Webber points out that there is also a hybrid Stars That Shine Darkly album with part 1 on Side A and part 2 on Side B.  Date and location from Ted Panken on a WKCR-FM broadcast.  Presence of Omoe noted by ct; Danny Ray Thompson confirms that Ra "augmented" the All-Stars on a couple of occasions.
from Campbell / Trent  The Earthly Recordings 2nd ed.

Stars that Shine Darkly volume 2


Sun Ra All Stars
Stars That Shine Darkly
(hybrid)

1. Stars that Shine Darkly   14:23
2. Stars that Shine Darkly volume 2   23:05

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Thursday, August 23, 2012

Radioactivity and the Outskirts of the Universe


WKCR Sun Ra Festival Poster 1987


Philadelphia 1984
This is likely the Halloween show.  Via Sugarmegs.  Thanks to Ritzbird for the heads up!

Many THANKS to Marc E.  If anyone would like to share any recordings from these performances, I would love to hear them.

Sunday, August 19, 2012

2nd Chance: Sun Ra - Hiroshima (1985)


Performed almost solo by Sun Ra (save the occasional selected percussion effects and bird calls) on an Atlanta theatre pipe organ, the haunting title track is every bit as dark, reflective and epic a lament as its title suggests. While Hiroshima very much feels like a standalone piece, Stars That Shine Darkly is equally fascinating, but for very different reasons. Recorded live in Montreux in November 1983 and featuring the Sun Ra All Stars who, besides Arkestra mainstays John Gilmore and Marshall Allen, also include the interstellar talents of Archie Shepp, Don Cherry and Lester Bowie, Stars That Shine Darkly catches the ensemble in heavyweight improvisatory mood.

Part revelatory listening experience, part hair-raising journey to the outer limits of the known jazz universe, the album feels much longer than its 29- minute playing time, thanks to the sheer diversity and scope of the ideas so dazzlingly compressed into its two wildly contrasting tracks.
reviewed by Grahame Bent

Hiroshima (Sun Ra)


400. [297] Sun Ra All Stars

Stars that Shine Darkly /
Stars that Shine Darkly Volume 2

Sun Ra (p, syn, voc); Don Cherry (pocket tp); Eloe Omoe (cacl); Lester Bowie (tp); Marshall Allen (as, fl, ob, EVI); John Gilmore (ts, voc); Archie Shepp (ss); Richard Davis (b); Clifford Jarvis (d); Philly Joe Jones (d); Famoudou Don Moye (d, Sun Percussion).

Montreux, Switzerland,
between November 2 and 5, 1983

"Stars that Shine Darkly part 1" was first released in 1985 on Side A of the Saturn LP 10-11-85, Stars That Shine Darkly Volume 1.  This album has also been titled Hiroshima.  "Stars that Shine Darkly part 2" was first released in 1985 on Side B of the Saturn Gemini LP 9-1213-85, Stars that Shine Darkly Volume 2, also titled Outer Reach Intensity-Energy.  Mark Webber points out that there is also a hybrid Stars That Shine Darkly album with part 1 on Side A and part 2 on Side B.  Date and location from Ted Panken on a WKCR-FM broadcast.  Presence of Omoe noted by ct; Danny Ray Thompson confirms that Ra "augmented" the All-Stars on a couple of occasions.


Stars that Shine Darkly (Sun Ra All-Stars)





416. [298]  Sun Ra

Stars That Shine Darkly

Sum Ra (pipe org).
Atlanta, GA, 1984 or 1985

Hiroshima (Ra)
unidentified titles (unissued)

Saturn 10-11-85, Stars That Shine Darkly, was released in 1985.  It is sometimes titled Hiroshima.  "Hiroshima" appeared on Side B.  In the first edition of this discography [Earthly Recordings vol. 1], this piece was said to have been recorded on the same European tour as the All Stars material.  However, in a conversation with Peter Hinds on Feb. 14, 1986, Sun Ra alluded to the existence of additional material from this performance, as well as an unissued video by Danny Ray Thompson.  Peter Hinds refers to "the thing in Atlanta, Ga, with the organ."  According to John and Peter Hinds, the organ was located in a large theater in Atlanta.  The exact date is not known, but the Arkestra was in Atlanta on October 26, 1984 and again on January 1, 1985.
From The Earthly Recordings of Sun Ra 2nd ed.






Hiroshima
Art Yard Stereo LP 2007


1. Hiroshima   14:33
2. Stars that Shine Darkly   14:15

Files include a rip I received through the Sun Ra Trading Group
of Saturn 10-11-85 (1985)

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Wednesday, August 15, 2012

2nd Chance: Sun Ra - Lanquidity (Acetate, LP, & CD) (1978)

Original LP Artwork (sold at Arkestra concerts)

For years Lanquidity (1978) was practically a myth - a thing of legends that Sun Ra collectors could only dream of one day hearing.  This changed when Evidence issued their HDCD-Remastered edition in 2000.  Since that time it has become recognized as one of Ra's most accessible and unique albums in a catalog of music that is seldom easily accessible but always unique.  This amazing album has found its way around the www more than a few times so to bring something special to you, I decided to offer 3 rips from three unique sources:  The Lanquidity Acetate, an LP rip from the 180g reissue, and the CD.  I hope you enjoy the opportunity to compare and contrast the sonic delights that each offers.

277. [223]  Sun Ra
Sun Ra (ARP, Fender Rhodes ep, Yamaha org, Hammond B3 org, Mini-Moog syn, p, orchestral bells, Crumar Mainman, voc); Eddie Gale (tp); Michael Ray (tp, flg); Marshall Allen (as, ob, fl); Danny Davis (as, fl); John Gilmore (ts); Danny Ray Thompson (bars, fl); Julian Pressley (bars); James Jacson (bsn, fl, ob, ethnic voice); Eloe Omoe (bcl, fl); Dale Williams (eg); Disco Kid (eg); Richard Williams (b, eb); Luqman Ali (d, perc); Atakatune (cga, tymp); Michael Anderson (perc); June Tyson (ethnic voice); Edde Tahmahs [Eddie Thomas] (ethnic voice).
Blank Tapes, NYC, July 17, 1978

Philly Jazz PJ 666, Lanquidity, was released in 1978.  All information from the album jacket.  Much overdubbing was used on this album.  According to Rick Barry of Philly Jazz, Ra requested that Omoe's name be listed as "Ego Omoe" on the jacket.  Dale Williams says that Disco Kid's first name was Greg; Disco Kid was responsible for the "straight" guitar playing, while Williams handled the wa-wa and other effects.

A test pressing for this LP was recently discovered by Gilbert Hsiao.  The matrix numbers are PJ1006A/B, and the date incised in the vinyl is 9/14/78.  Two tracks are somewhat different on the test pressing.   "Twin Stars of Thence" has another 10 seconds of guitar introduction with horns.  "That's How I Feel" contains another four minutes of music beyond the issued version, which fades after Ra's solo -- there is a baritone sax solo, perhaps by Danny Ray Thompson, and a return of the head.

According to Armin Büttner and Peter Roberts, "When Pathways Meet" was re-released in 1994 on Swiss Luv'n'Haight LH-010, a 12" 33-rpm maxi single.  A track by Viva Brazil is on the other side.  The same Ra track also appeared on a sampler LP/CD on the same label titled Brotherhood, LHLP/LHCD-018.
from The Earthly Recordings 2nd ed.

Unfortunately, I have virtually no other info whatsoever on the Acetate (the 'test pressing').  Our generous Anonymous reader offered this to me and of course I jumped at the chance to hear and share it.  He believes this rip is a generation or two removed from the original.  Perhaps it is actually the 'test pressing' mentioned above?  "Where Pathways Meet" was released on a 2010 compilation titled The Blank Generation: Blank Tapes NYC 1975-1987.

When Pathways Meet (Acetate Mix) from
The Blank Generation


Original Foil Cover


While one can't quite call it the Sun Ra dance album, this 1978 recording, made for a tiny Philadelphia record label, finds the Sun Ra Arkestra's rhythm section settling into a steady groove on each of the lengthy tracks, while horns, reeds, guitars, and Sun Ra's keyboards solo in overlapping patterns on top. The title number recalls Charles Mingus' "Goodbye Porkpie Hat" in its slow pace and elegiac tone, while the middle three tracks have livelier beats with playing that often answers to the style of fusion played by many jazz groups in the late '70s. "There Are Other Worlds (They Have Not Told You Of)," the nearly 11-minute concluding tune, is the closest to more familiar 1960s and early-'70s Sun Ra, with its less cohesive lead work and the "ethnic voices" that speak, sing, and whisper about outer space. Lanquidity was extremely rare in its original vinyl pressing. It was reissued by Evidence Music on September 26, 2000, with liner notes in which John Dilberto discussed Sun Ra's 25-year residence in Philadelphia and Tom Buchler, who organized the recording session, discussed the making of the album.
AMG review by William Ruhlmann


This 1978 session, coming relatively late in Sun Ra's creative history, is another extraordinary venture into uncharted musical terrain. As the name suggests, it's a liquid and languid musical state, from the lounge area of Ra's cosmos, but it can also be resiliently funky and subtly dissonant in ways unheard outside the orchestra's precincts. The rhythm section of electric bass, two guitars, and three drummers creates deep pulsing grooves for Sun Ra's assortment of ethereal organs and synthesizers and a horn complement of two trumpets and five reeds that are used sparingly for maximal effect. There are some elements of commercial crossover funk and even Miles Davis's electric period, but this is highly original music, an acid jazz prototype in which groove and electronica intersect with muted brass and a heady assortment of reeds and percussion. Sudden squiggles of funk guitar mix with strong improvisation from Sun Ra and his regular soloists, like saxophonists John Gilmore and Marshall Allen, who are always ready to bend the music into some new pitch zone. The lyrical title track bears a resemblance to Mingus's "Goodbye Pork Pie Hat," and "There Are Other Worlds" is supplemented by overdubbed "Ethnic Voices" and additional percussion and electronics, creating an eerily engaging tapestry. Recorded in a New York studio with the sound further improved by Evidence, this is unusually well recorded for Sun Ra music of the period, a warm bath in music both lush and exotic. Amazon Review by --Stuart Broomer


1978’s Lanquidity (now re-issued by Evidence) features a silver and purple cover image of Ra that begs the question: Has Sun Ra made a fusion album? This thought at first seems merely ridiculous, then after further consideration becomes a bit surreal, and then upon hearing becomes downright disturbing. As with any Ra project, a simple description such as “Ra does fusion” serves no justice in truly describing the actual music. Ra was a master at twisting known musical idioms into his idiosyncratic vision, and Lanquidity proves to be a stirring, mesmerizing example of this vision.
All of the tunes generally follow the same basic structure: the Arkestra riffs on dark, bluesy motifs; the bass and percussion create an interlocking, unchanging groove; and behind it all Ra, on piano and synthesizers, and the two guitarists (a rarely used instrument in Ra’s music), fill in the space with ethereal chords and disembodied riffs.

On the title track the Arkestra pieces together a creeping, mournful melody with shifting combinations of the two-trumpet and five-reed horn section. Against this, Ra plays wistful fragments on his Rhodes, while Richard Williams provides the glue with a sparse electric bass line. This funk-stuck-in-slow-motion points to an uncomfortable dread waiting below the surface.
The rhythm section opens “Twin Stars of Thence”, setting up a hypnotic, dragging pulse. Acoustic bass, guitar, traps and tympani lock in while Ra muses methodically on organ. The horns materialize out of nothingness and Gilmore weaves abstract blues lines into the mixture. A guitar solo, then the baritone saxophone takes a spare turn that lags behind the beat, while behind Ra incorporates lines from the guitarist’s solo into the background. Combined, these elements disorient and displace the listener. You feel as if this music should go down easy, but the candy coating turns out to be a sticky, unescapable molasses.

The Arkestra finally drags you where they want you on “There Are Other Worlds (they have not told you of)” A sleepy, barely noticeable hi-hat beats perpetually, soon joined by a low-register chorus of humming. Ra’s synthesizer and piano textures threaten to overtake the other instruments, pushing the piece toward disintegration. Towards the end the atmosphere ge s downright spooky, with breathy, whispering voices materializing, chanting the title over and over again. All the while flutes, then synthesizer, then dissonant piano chords, then saxophone swirl about, until they all dissipate like some phantom, leaving you wondering if what you just heard was really there at all.
On Lanquidity Ra turns the idea of disco and funk on its head: the repetitive beats, which usually make one feel like they know where the next step will land, instead leave one warily hanging on every moment. The music leads us in an unsettling direction, to a secret world where the lumbering grooves at first seduce with their simplicity, then intoxicate with their richness, until finally the darker sound textures overtake you and drop you in a place you had not imagined before.
 All About Jazz review by Matthew Wuethrich


Another foil cover

Sun Ra is one of the most challenging and innovative composers of the 20th century. He has a stupefyingly enormous discography, he espoused an enigmatic philosophy of cosmic proportions, and his music is often full of dense and unconventional sounds. Knowing where to start can be difficult, digesting his more experimental recordings even more so. For these reasons, and because of its once rare status, 1978's Lanquidity has long been among the most coveted Sun Ra records. It blends the Arkestra's characteristically obtuse performances and noisy tendencies with strong melodies, fat bass lines, and relatively straightforward rhythms. It's an excellent record for beginners and maybe the most accessible Sun Ra album ever recorded.

Because of previous encounters with Sun Ra's music, I was surprised by what I heard in the opening moments of Lanquidity. The title song features a plodding rhythm beat out by percussionist Michael Anderson, horn solos cool enough for an early Miles Davis record, and space enough to identify the many fractured tones that materialize around Richard Williams' weighty bass line. It is impressive that, with more than 14 Arkestra members on board, nearly every one of them gets the chance to speak up before the first song is out. Keyboards, synthesizer noise, oboe, flute, bassoon, and various horns (one of them played by Eddie Gale) take turns chattering or singing over the foundation of Anderson and Williams' somnambulistic rhythm section. The Arkestra's ingenious blending of simple rhythms and melodies with angular bursts of noise and interwoven phrases makes concentrating on the music's many complexities easier. The sometimes jarring juxtapositions of sax honking and squealing woodwinds are transformed into colorful, ecstatic, and pleasing expressions, like fireworks exploding over a familiar scene. And the often vibrant, strongly melodic solos are made that much more attractive by the atonal harmonies and contrasting elements that swirl throughout the song. Each musician plays off the other musician in such an effortless and easy-sounding way that I'm tempted to think Sun Ra notated each and every last note of the song, right down to the most nuanced dynamics. "Lanquidity" is a masterwork of arrangement and performance, and one of the best opening songs to an album that I've ever heard.

But things only get better from there. "Where Pathways Meet" is brisk and far more upbeat, almost danceable. Williams' bass, Sun Ra's piano, and a baritone sax combine to form a basic melodic pattern with a boastful, heavy swagger while a trio saxophones bluster a melody over it that swings so hard it rocks. Michael Anderson and second percussionist Artaukatune slam out a sample-worthy backbeat that is met by more blaring horns, a pair of dueling electric guitars, and a from-the-gut trumpet solo so emotive it outshines everything the Arkestra and both guitarists can pump out together. On each of the following songs, the same basic idea is employed: Sun Ra combines attractive and catchy melodies and rhythms with spaced out, often impressionistic instrumental voices that are more painterly than they are musical. It is astonishing that the Arkestra keeps this same basic formula compelling throughout the entire album. The rhythms, melodies, solos, and tapestry-like arrangements on each song are all memorable, layered, and exciting, and they've yet to get old, though I've played this record countless times in the last couple of months. Whether or not anyone could dance to this stuff, the music commands the body just as well as it commands the imagination, and I think that is one of the reasons it is so enduring.

"There Are Other Worlds (They Have Not Told You Of)" concludes the album in a more abstract and disjointed way. A constant rhythm section still leads the song, at least at first. But, Sun Ra adds more synthesizer, wandering piano, and atonality to the proceedings. Eventually, whispering voices are added to the mix, which speak of space, music, secret knowledge, and mysterious worlds beyond our own. From start to finish, the music becomes increasingly fractured, until it is broken down into primal piano and synthesizer utterances, like a radio communication received from afar. These final moments lead naturally into Sun Ra's more abstract and difficult music, as if the album were made to prepare listeners for what comes next, whether it be a record like Interstellar Low Ways or Heliocentric Worlds Vol. 2. My natural inclination once the album has finished is to put more Ra on and follow him further into the outer reaches of music.

For those curious about the man's music Lanquidity is an excellent place to begin. More than that, it's a stupendous album that marries Sun Ra's more adventurous ideas with a soulful and catchy sound anyone can appreciate.
Brainwashed.com review


Lanquidity (Acetate)

01 - Lanquidity   8:25
02 - Where Pathways Meet   6:36
03 - That's How I Feel   12:22
04 - Twin Stars of Thence   10:01
05 - There Are Other Worlds (They Have Not Told You Of)   9:29


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Lanquidity LP

01 - Lanquidity   8:19
02 - Where Pathways Meet   6:31
03 - That's How I Feel   8:01
04 - Twin Stars of Thence   9:32
05 - There Are Other Worlds (They Have Not Told You Of)   10:40


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Lanquidity CD

01 - Lanquidity   8:22
02 - Where Pathways Meet   6:33
03 - That's How I Feel   8:06
04 - Twin Stars of Thence   9:34
05 - There Are Other Worlds (They Have Not Told You Of)   10:57


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Saturday, August 11, 2012

2nd Chance: Sub Underground (1974)



The appropriately titled Sub-Underground (also known as Cosmo-Earth Fantasy and Temple U.) is another super-rare artifact, badly in need of upgrade and reissue. Originally released as Saturn 92074 in late 1974, Prof. Campbell posits side one was recorded at Variety Recorders in New York City sometime in September while side two was recorded live at Temple University in Philadelphia, possibly on September 20 (Campbell & Trent p.214-215). Yet, as usual with Sun Ra, there is much confusion and uncertainty regarding the details of this recording and, after careful listening, I’m not sure I agree with our discographer in all respects. Unfortunately, the sound quality is somewhat murky and my less-than-perfect transfer of the original LP does not help to clarify much. Despite (or perhaps because of) its difficulties, Sub-Underground a fascinating record.

Side one is taken up with “Cosmo-Earth Fantasy,” an epic, twenty-two minute improvisation, obviously recorded in the studio. It begins with Arkestra scrubbing, scraping and plucking a variety of zithers, harps, guitars and other “Strange Strings” while Ra strums the interior of a piano. I love it! Enervated bass octaves come and go. Is this electric bass? (Prof. Campbell thinks so.) Or is it Ra on some sort of keyboard? Maybe—it’s hard to tell. Anyway, the spacey exotica goes on for about seven minutes before Ra fingers an ominous chord sequence on Clavinet, signaling Marshall Allen to pick up the oboe and echo Ra’s insistently repeated figures. Sonny continues to hold down a pedal point and outline upper-register harmonies while Allen keenly elaborates on the simple theme. Just lovely. Then the oboe drops out and there’s more “bass,” with what sounds like a melodica wheezing around the corner. At the half-way mark, a high-pitched marimba (Ra?) starts clattering away, Chinese-style, eventually joined by Allen on flute. Then the texture starts to thicken (possibly through the use of overdubbing) as multiple flutes, “bass,” Clavinet and percussion build up a spiky, Messiaenic din. Wild! After some slow, held chords, the piece comes to a definite, satisfying conclusion. Prof. Campbell lists additional instrumentalists, including John Gilmore on tenor sax, Eloe Omoe on bass clarinet and (possibly) Dale Williams on guitar (Id.), but I just don’t hear them on this track. Regardless, “Cosmo-Earth Fantasy” is a classic.


Love is For Always

Side two begins with “Love Is For Always,” another impossibly romantic piano ballad featuring Gilmore’s creamy and delicious tenor saxophone—yes, it’s another incredible Gilmore solo! This beautiful Ra composition was, apparently, only performed one time. What a shame! The distant and boomy drums indicate it was indeed recorded live, although, curiously, any applause has been deftly edited from the end of the track.



220. [192] Sun Ra and his Arkestra

Sub Underground

Sun Ra (p, Mini-Moog, syn, keyb, marimba); Marshall Allen (as, fl, ob); John Gilmore (ts, perc); Eloe Omoe (bcl); poss. Dale Williams (eg); unidentified (b); poss. Tommy Hunter (d); prob. Atakatune (cga, perc); prob. Odun (cga, perc).
Variety Recording Studio,
NYC, September 1974

Cosmo-Earth Fantasy (Ra)

Released in 1974 as Side A of Philadelphia Saturn LP 92074, Sub Underground.  The title is confusing because other, unrelated LPs were marketed at one time or another as being in the "Sub Underground Series."  Also known as Cosmo-Earth Fantasy and Temple U.

According to Glen Jones, the Arkestra arrived late at the Five Spot for a gig one night in the fall of 1974 because they had been recording in a studio.  This is audibly a studio recording, and Variety Recording Studio was used regularly by Ra during the '70s.  Personnel identified by rlc.  Gilbert Hsaio points out that a marimba can be heard on this session; very likely the instrument was played by Sunny himself, as on "Crystal Spears" from 1973.  John Szwed thinks that overdubbing was used on this session (it definitely was on some Variety sessions from the late 1970s) and that an electric guitarist was also present.

221. [193]

Sun Ra (p, Mii-Moog, syn, org); Marshall Allen (as, fl, ob); John Gilmore (ts, perc); Eloe Omoe (bcl); unidentified (b); poss. Tommy Hunter (d); prob. Atakatune [Stanley Morgan] (cga, perc); prob. Odun [Russell Branch] (cga, perc); Eddie Thomas [Thomas Thaddeus] (voc -1); unidentified male (voc -1); June Tyson (voc -2); poss. Cheryl Banks (voc -2).
Temple University, Philadelphia,
poss. September 20, 1974

Love Is for Always (Ra)
The Song of Drums (Ra) -1
The World of Africa (Ra) -2

Released in 1974 as Side B of Saturn LP 92074, Sub Underground.  Some copies are titled Sub Underground #2.  This LP is also known as Cosmo-Earth Fantasy.  The location for these performances, clearly from a live session, is suggested by still another title, Temple U.  Alden Kimbrough's copy has "Live at Temple University 1974" written on the back cover.
From Campbell / Trent  The Earthly Recordings of Sun Ra 2nd ed.


 

Sub Underground (1974)
1. Cosmo - Earth fantasy    21:26 
2. Love is for always    6:49 
3. The song of drums    6:07 
4. The world of Africa    3:03

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Another amazing LP rip courtesy of our friend, Paul W.
Originally posted 18 January 2011

Tuesday, August 7, 2012

King Britt on Sun Ra - Noise from the 18th Floor


Cosmic Culture: A Sonic Journey into Afrofuturism

2007 Pew Fellow King Britt has had numerous influences during his international career as a DJ, performer, and composer.  For this program of African-American music inspired by science fiction, the Grammy Award-nominated artist has selected performances by those who seem to have a spiritual connection with a greater force. In part one, titled “Yesterday,” Britt’s mix of 10 compositions includes the mystical Sun Ra in a live performance of “Space Is the Place” with an overlay of an interview with Britt’s mother Pearl and “Feel” by George Duke, which, according to King, “just takes you there.” The journey continues with “Today,” a mega-mix of over two-dozen pieces. From Los Angeles-based band Build an Ark, which has kept Sun Ra’s spiritual message alive with songs such as “The Stars Are Singing Too,” to Afrika Bambaataa’s “Planet Rock,” which Britt describes as an “anthem of our generation,” this collection is a reflection of his artistic vision. Cosmic Culture also features the music of jazz greats Dee Dee Bridgewater, Herbie Hancock, and many more, and closes with a third installment, “Tomorrow,” which features a new composition, “Beyond the Sun,” written by Britt especially for this program under his pseudonym Fhloston Paradigm. The program is produced and hosted by Tracey Tanenbaum with Rodney Whittenberg of Melodyvision as sound engineer. Photo by Donna Burch.

Jump to site.
 The Pew Fellowship site offers a pdf of the below playlist and a free download of the Fhloston Paradigm track!

Current Schedule (all times listed in EST):
Cosmic Culture: A Sonic Journey Into Afrofuturism with King Britt: 8 a.m., 10 a.m., noon, 10 p.m., midnight, 2 a.m.







King Britt Playlist:

Cosmic Culture: A Sonic Journey into Afrofuturism

Part 1: Yesterday



“Kawaida”

Kawaida



“Gamla Stan”

Don Cherry

plus: an interview with Alondra Nelson



“Ostinato”

Herbie Hancock (as Mwandishi)



“John McLaughlin”

Miles Davis



"Space Is the Place (Live)"

Sun Ra

plus: an interview with Pearl Britt



“Feel”

George Duke



“Rien Neva Plus”

Funk Factory



“Cabral”

Mtume feat. Dee Dee Bridgewater



“Radhe Shyam”

Alice Coltrane

plus: an interview with Sun Ra

Part 2: Today (Megamix)



“African Roots”

King Tubby



“Eyjafjallajokul”

Mad Professor



“Zodiac Shit”

Flying Lotus



“Ahoulaghuine Akaline (King Britt Remix)”

Bombino



“Teleport”

Headless Headhunters



“Nights Over Nantes”

Jneiro Jarel



“Castles”

HouseShoes feat. Jimetta Rose



“Brgundy”

MndDsgn



“Connect”

Some Other Ship



“All in Forms (Leatherette Remix)”

Bonobo



“Light Odyssey”

Union



“Planetary Analysis”

King Britt feat. Rich Media



“Discipline 3”

Ras G

plus: an interview with Sun Ra

“Heritage Ship”

Madlib



“Emotional Quotient Deringer of Chiek Anta Diop”

King Britt feat. Rilners Jouegck



“New Wave”

Common feat. Stereolab



“The Stars Are Singing Too”

Build an Ark



“Bug in the Bassbin”

Innerzone Orchestra



“Raven”

Actress



“Voodoo Ray”

A Guy Called Gerald



“Dem Young Scones”

Moodymann



“Flower (King Britt’s Underwater Garden Dub Remix)”

Soul Dhamma



“Planet Rock”

Afrika Bambaataa



“Mozaik”

Zomby



“Endgame”

Antipop Consortium



“Loveless”

4Hero feat. Ursula Rucker

Part 3: Tomorrow



“Beyond the Sun (Live)”

Fhloston Paradigm



“Endeavors for Never

(The Last Time We Spoke You Said You Were Not Here. I Saw You Though.)”

Shabazz Palaces



Sunday, August 5, 2012

A Sun Ra Story - via The Brain Police


Robert Mugge's 'A Joyful Noise' is what first drew me drew and bound me into Sun Ra's orbit.  I had heard his name, read of his band, and knew of his influence upon George Clinton and the Parliament Funkadelic for years but had never delved deeper until I found this documentary on sale at a local bookstore in the late '90s.  Ra's ruminations on balancing equations, the Black/White House, and his brief take on Monk's 'Round Midnight floored me and I was hooked forever.  Today,  I found this wonderful blog entry on our favorite Saturnian and felt it should be shared here.  Please stop by The Brain Police and leave a note of thanks for the following interesting anecdote.

 A Joyful Noise.

A documentary directed by Robert Mugge in 1980. I am continuously inspired and uplifted by the creative energy of a man who was born Herman Poole Blount in Birmingham, Alabama on May 22, 1914, but decided that he did not choose to be a mere earthling and he could be what ever he wanted. Herman, who was self taught pianist and orchestral arranger, self evolved into a being called Sun Ra. He even convinced the United States Government to issue him a passport as Sun Ra, who, as we all know was born on the planet Saturn. He traveled the Earth for decades and still travels the Spaceways as Sun Ra. He wrote and performed music that transcended the past, the present and encompassed a future we will probably never know. Money? Record labels? Heck, he pressed his own records and sold them out of the back of car. He invented his own mythology and made it real by recycling the cast offs of your affluence. He invented his own systems of logic and knowledge. He basically kept the same group of musicians who ranged from musical illiterates to absolute genius together for almost 35 years. He was first jazz pianist to use electric keyboards, one of the first artists to use Moog synthesizers and yet was able to integrate the big band feel of Fletcher Henderson, african tribal chants and beats and egyptian solar mythology into the same performance, creating some of the most original and brilliant music I have ever heard. He made an absolutely brilliant record in the 1960's by acquiring a collection of Asian stringed instruments and giving them to his band, who had no idea as to how they were tuned or how they were supposed to be played and then recorded a guided improvised musical journey...He made movies unlike anything you have ever seen with no budget, he published books of poetry and philosophy. He left the planet physically in 1993.
So, last night, I had dinner with my friend Brian who is a musician and record producer. Brian was a friend in NYC, but has a house outside of Fleurac...in a forested valley above the Grotte de Rouffignac with his wife, Melinda  and son, Harry. Interesting, we lived a few blocks from each other in New York but now see each other more here in the Dordogne. Brian wanted to lend me a book, Space Is The Place...the biography of Sun Ra witten by John F. Zwed. I thanked him, but I have owned the book since the 1990s, when it was published...we started to talk about Sun Ra and Brian told me this story about a musician he had produced that wrote songs that reminded him of the work of Stephen Foster. He was so intrigued by the Steophen Foster references in the mans work that he decided that he wanted to do a project of completely "outside" artists performing the works of Stephen Foster. He spoke to Ornette Coleman, Tom Waits, Leonard Cohen and a few other artists and they were enthusiastic. Then he approached Sun Ra. Sun Ra was enthusiastic and was going to record his version of The Camp Town Races, but Sun Ra had a reservation...he demanded to see a sample of Stephen Fosters hand writing. He said he had to see his penmanship to determine if Mr. Foster was a racist....
(The story continues at The Brain Police)

Thursday, August 2, 2012

2nd Chance: Sun Ra - Astro Black (1973)



 Re-posted by Re-Quest.
If you have never heard this album.  You need this now.  I believe it to be one of Ra's most stunningly beautiful albums, adventurous and sublime.

According to the jacket of Astro Black, Sun Ra’s first new recording for ABC/Impulse! was made at “El Saturn Studio” in Chicago on May 7, 1972, but that date is questionable since the Arkestra was just leaving California in May -- and the studio name is “strictly mythic” (Campbell & Trent p.186) Whatever the date or actual location, it was clearly made in a professional recording studio as the sound quality is exceptionally good. Sun Ra was obviously determined to take advantage of the mass exposure a major label could bring, producing one his finest albums. Notably, Ronnie Boykins makes a welcome return on bass after a long absence and he is prominently featured here, driving the band to great heights. The Arkestra is augmented with both Akh Tal Ebah and Kwami Hadi on trumpets, Charles Stephens on trombone, Alzo Wright on violin and viola, along with several conga players, who give much of this record its avant-exotica feel. But Boykins’s clearly inspires Sonny and his fluent explorations on organ and synthesizer throughout the album demonstrate a consummate mastery of electronic instruments. Astro Black is, in my opinion, one of Sun Ra’s crowning recorded achievements.
(continue reading at Rodger Coleman's fantastic NuVoid - Sun Ra Sundays blog)



Impulse AS-9255, Astro Black, was released in 1973.  Personnel and date from the Impulse jacket; the location was identified as "El Saturn Studio," but that is strictly mythic.  There is some question about the precise date as well, because the Arkestra was just leaving Oakland in May 1972.  "The Cosmo-Fire, Part II" also appeared on an Impulse Sampler LP, ASD-9267, titled No Energy Crisis.  "Astro Black" also appeared in abridged form on an Impulse sampler called Impulsively!, Impulse 1973 or AS-9266.  The "mistro-clarinet" was presumably an alto model.
From The Earthly Recordings of Sun Ra 2nd ed.

Discipline "99"

Sun Ra (Mini-Moog syn, e-vib, org); Akh Tal Ebah (tp); Lamont McClamb [Kwame Hadi] (tp); Charles Stephens (tb); Marshall Allen (as); Danny Davis (as); John Gilmore (ts, perc); Danny Ray Thompson (bars); Eloe Omoe (bcl); Pat Patrick (mistro-cl); Alzo Wright (vln, vla); Ronnie Boykins (b); Tommy Hunter (d); Atakatume [Stanley Morgan] (cga); Odun [Russell Branch] (cga); Chica (cga); Ruth Wright (voc); June Tyson (voc).
Studio Recording, Chicago, May 7, 1972



Astro Black
Sun Ra (with Arkestra)

1. Astro Black    10:53 
2. Discipline "99"    3:41 
3. Hidden Spheres    8:05 
4. The Cosmo-Fire (part 1)    6:57 
5. The Cosmo-Fire (part 2)    7:08 
6. The Cosmo-Fire (part 3)    4:17

-FLAC-

or

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