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SUN RA REVISITED: SUPERSONIC
JAZZ (Evidence ECD 22015-2) [1956]
At
any rate, I was disappointed that you did not mention some of the other earlier Arkestra
recordings, specifically SUPERSONIC JAZZ and ANGELS AND DEMONS AT PLAY/THE NUBIANS OF
PLUTONIA, the latter if only for its spirited reading of Julian Priesters
Urnack. Unfortunately Evidence
does not put the recording dates on the outside of their packages only inside the
booklets, all of which are very good, as I am sure you will agree. Consequently, it is
often difficult for the novice to determine what is what.
I turned a nephew on to Sun Ra with copies of SUN SONG and SUPERSONIC JAZZ a few
years ago and tried to caution him that all Sun Ra CDs were not of this caliber...and he
ended up buying a lot of stuff recorded in the 60s that he finds interesting
(luckily) but is still not what he was looking for.
So the more applicable titles you could list the better. There; I think that's what
I'm trying to say! So
lets take a look at the two albums Mike mentions and a later album referred
to by the liner-notes writers for both Evidence CDs.
ANGELS
AND DEMONS AT PLAY was apparently first issued in 1965, but is made up of two very
different sessions, one from 1960 (originally side one) and one from 1956 (side two)
the latter contemporaneous with the recording of SUPER-SONIC JAZZ. The Evidence CD combines this short album
with THE NUBIANS OF PLUTONIA, which was recorded in 1958 and 1959. Some
confusion surrounds this latter album. According
to Evidence, NUBIANS was originally issued by Saturn in 1966 as THE LADY WITH THE
GOLDEN STOCKINGS (El Saturn 406). In the late 1960s, the title was changed to THE NUBIANS
OF PLUTONIA. However, Neal Umphred, in
his Goldmines Price Guide to Collectible Jazz
Albums 1949-1969, draws upon the discography of Sun Ra scholar Robert Campbell (to
whom Evidences annotators also defer) to contradict this. Saturn 406 was never titled THE LADY WITH THE GOLDEN STOCKINGS. That catalog number was applied only to NUBIANS
when the album was issued under that title in 1969. However,
Umphred mistakenly states Saturn 406 is a reissue of 9956-2-M/N, which was
titled ROCKET #9 TAKE OFF FOR THE PLANET VENUS when it was released in 1966. Whats more, this album (ROCKET #9) was also
reissued as Saturn 203, INTERSTELLAR LOW WAYS. And
Umphred also claims that Saturn 203 is a reissue of 9956-2-M/N with a red &
white cover. Umphred
made an error perhaps it is a typographical error.
The actual INTERSTELLAR LOW WAYS (recorded late in 1960)
features seven tracks, two of which are Interstellar Low Ways and Rocket
Number Nine Take Off For The Planet Venus. (NRBQ
covered that track on their first album
.) I
think Umphred confused two similar catalog numbers and meant to say that Saturn 406 was a reissue of
9956-11E/F which was indeed THE LADY WITH THE GOLDEN STOCKINGS. Confusion is
abetted by the fact that at least five Saturn
LPs released in 1965 and 1966 all had the same initial catalog numbers of
9956, followed by -2/A/B (FATE IN A PLEASANT MOOD),
-2/O/P (ANGELS AND DEMONS AT PLAY), -2-M/N (ROCKET #9),
-11E/F (LADY), or -11A/B (SUN RA VISITS EARTH). That could drive anyone crazy. In
1974 Ra cut a deal with ABC-Impulse to re-release these albums. SUPERSONIC JAZZ was reissued as SUPER-SONIC SOUNDS
(AS-9271). ANGELS AND DEMONS AT PLAY
(AS-9245) and THE NUBIANS OF PLUTONIA (AS-9242) were not retitled. All sported a Saturn Research logo. (Impulse also released several other Saturn
albums, all with much more attractive professional packaging than the
originals. These releases were the first Sun
Ra albums many people encountered and on a label known for its releases by John
Coltrane, Archie Shepp, Pharoah Sanders, Albert Ayler and others who might be considered
Ras musical kin. The Impulse deal was
one of Ras smartest career moves.)
When
I first heard this album (in 1974, when I found it on Impulse), I was initially excited to
find such an early recording, which I hoped would be as rewarding as Ras other early
albums. But after I listened to it I was
disappointed. It seemed less well-defined,
less focussed, and it was less satisfying. It
was almost like listening to an album of demos. I
would compare it with SOUND OF JOY; as I said of that album, The material is weaker,
the textures thinner. That
thinner texture is worth remarking upon. This
album was recorded by a 12-piece band a big band in jazz parlance. Yet much of the album sounds like the work of a
small combo, with Ras piano and the bass and drums playing with or behind one horn
at a time. Even in 1956 Ra was experimenting
with piano plus percussion (he used both a drummer and a musician who played tympani and
timbali on this date; he also used both an acoustic bassist and an electronic
bassist) to create eastern moods. After
1960 this would be the norm for Ras Arkestra: open space, lots of percussion and
only rare full-band ensembles.
The
1956 portion of ANGELS four tracks, the fifth through eighth on the CD is
the only part of this album which captures the early big-band sound of the
Myth-Science Arkestra. Those
tracks include Priesters Urnack, which Mike mentioned in his letter. The other half of the original ANGELS is spacier,
looser, and more percussion-oriented. Both
halves were recorded by nine-piece bands, of whom John Gilmore (tenor sax) and Ra himself
are the only members in common. NUBIANS,
on the other hand, was recorded by a twelve-member band but sounds as loose and
open as the smaller 1960 band. In his liner
notes for the CD, John Corbett says, 1957 to 1959, the zone that falls between the
two chronological poles of ANGELS AND DEMONS AT PLAY, offers the initial answer to the
question: How does the Arkestra get from being a boldly eccentric big-band to being the
pioneer percussion-heavy open-improvisation ensembles of the early 1960s? The music on THE NUBIANS OF PLUTONIA consists
entirely of Arkestra rehearsal tapes drawn from that transitional period. Here, with the full-strength horn section on hand,
we encounter a loosening group, stocked with percussion
. In
other words, for those seeking the boldly eccentric big-band, ANGELS/NUBIANS
offers relatively little (although Plutonian Nights and Star
Time both on NUBIANS both utilize thick charts, full of
Ras trademark twisted turns, as Corbett points out). But those who have been wondering about the
bands evolution will find it documented on this CD.
The
album was recorded at a live concert on Sunday, February 24, 1980 at Gasthof Mohren in
Switzerland, and runs 71 minutes. Only five
of the 15 tracks are credited to Ra (although the final track is clearly a group
improvisation); the remainder are standards and jazz standards like Cocktails For
Two, Round Midnight, Limehouse Blues, King
Porter Stomp, and Take The A Train.
Typically these open with atonal piano and a minute or two in become
band pieces, the execution of which varies from precise to sloppy. The band work was aptly described by Corbett in
the preceding paragraph: free-jazz solos rising out of more traditional ensembles. But
what most impressed me was the opening track, Light From a Hidden Sun, in
which Ra plays what, in a different context, could pass for modern polytonal classical
music and carries it off elegantly. His touch
is perfect, and his execution on this solo piano work is exemplary. I was strongly reminded of the work and the sound
of Cecil Taylor. On the other hand, I was mildly offended by the travesty made of
Thelonious Monks Round Midnight, which comes off as a razzberry at
Monk and belittles one of his major pieces. The
point this album makes is that, in 1980, twenty years after he had largely abandoned his
big-band charts, Sun Ra still occasionally gave a fond look back to earlier eras in jazz
and his band, here a nine-piece with two drummers, was able to rise to the
occasion, charts or no charts. (There had to
have been rehearsals, but the lack of charts probably explains the occasional raggedness.) The
Hat CD was issued in 1991, only two years before Ras death. In this last period of Ras career he seemed
restless with the free-jazz he had surrounded himself with for thirty years, and this
atypical album seemed to fit in with restlessness, for all that it was recorded a decade
earlier. The
more applicable titles you could list the better, Mike suggests, and there are other Sun Ra albums which date from the
50s and the early 60s. They are
all Saturn releases now available on CD from Evidence.
They include SOUND SUN PLEASURE (Evidence ECD 22014-2), WE TRAVEL THE SPACEWAYS c/w
BAD AND BEAUTIFUL (Evidence ECD 22038-2), SUN RA VISITS PLANET EARTH c/w INTERSTELLAR LOW
WAYS (Evidence ECD 22039-2) and FATE IN A PLEASANT MOOD c/w WHEN SUN COMES OUT (Evidence
ECD 22068-2). None
of those albums are as good as SUN SONG and JAZZ IN SILHOUETTE, but each offers something
for the die-hard fan of Ras big-band work. SOUND
SUN PLEASURE includes the original Saturn album (apparently released in the late
60s), thought to be recorded between 1958 and 1960 in Chicago, and seven
additional pieces which are Sun Ras earliest known recordings, dating,
it is believed, from 1953 or 1954 and 1955. Only
four tracks are composed (or co-composed with Hobart Dotson) by Ra; the rest are
standards, and several are played in a dance-band format which owes a lot more to Fletcher
Henderson than anything Ra recorded later. The
ray of sunshine here is an early version of Enlightenment, the Dotson-Ra piece
which is heard to better effect on JAZZ IN SILHOUETTE.
Stuff Smith plays violin on the earliest track, Deep Purple. Round Midnight is heard
here with a vocal by Hatty Randolph, in a much more traditional version of the
Monk piece than was performed in 1980. WE
TRAVEL THE SPACEWAYS was recorded in three separate sessions by three different Arkestras
in 1956, 1958 or 1959 and 1959 or 1960. The
music is loose and combo-like, but still not yet free-jazz.
BAD AND BEAUTIFUL was recorded in 1961 after Ra had moved his band to New
York City and it had been whittled by attrition down to a sextet an actual combo
consisting of three saxes (the core of the band, Marshall Allen, John Gilmore and Pat
Patrick) plus piano, bass and drums. The
music is still boppish, with touches of Ellingtonian coloration in places. Both albums were originally released by Saturn in
the late 60s. SUN
RA VISITS PLANET EARTH is one of the earlier recordings, despite the fact that Saturn
apparently released it in 1968: it was recorded in 1956 (side one of the LP) and 1958
(side two). INTERSTELLAR LOW WAYS (originally
released as ROCKET #9 TAKE OFF FOR THE PLANET VENUS in 1966, as mentioned earlier) was
recorded in Chicago in late 1960. PLANET
EARTH presents perhaps earlier versions of six of the nine pieces which were recorded by
Transition and eventually released as the Delmark LP of SOUND OF JOY, plus a track called
Eve. INTERSTELLAR LOW WAYS is
more transitional, and more forward-looking than the material used on BAD AND BEAUTIFUL
(despite the fact that it was recorded a year earlier).
It may also be the last album Ra recorded in Chicago. FATE
IN A PLEASANT MOOD was recorded around the same time as INTERSTELLAR LOW WAYS (late 1960)
and released by Saturn at about the same time as that LP.
WHEN SUN COMES OUT was recorded in New York in late 1962 and early 1963 and
first released by Saturn in 1963. It includes
a previously unissued track discovered on the master tape. What
these releases reveal is that Sun Ra had a limited repertoire of compositions during his
big-band period, and he tended to reuse these on his many Saturn album
releases in various performances often leavened with looser improvisations recorded
at his rehearsals. (Ra rehearsed his band
every day and all day with a lunch break before reassembling them for their
nightly club performances, and apparently recorded many of these rehearsals.) The best of his compositions and the bands
performances remain on SUN SONG and JAZZ IN SILHOUETTE.
Thats disappointing for anyone who hoped for more, but we can at
least celebrate what there was. And
those who share my fondness for early Sun Ra will want all the Evidence CDs mentioned
here, despite the fact that they do not measure up to SUN SONG or JAZZ IN SILHOUETTE. In ANGELS/NUBIANS they will find the key to the
evolution of Ras band, the seeds of which had apparently been with Ra all along.
SUNRISE IN DIFFERENT DIMENSIONS is for the more adventurous those who fully accept
the free-jazz of Sun Ra and want to hear it in a fresh context. NOTE: While I was at the Collecting Channel I did a
three-part series of short articles on Sun Ra. These
pieces borrowed heavily, in part, from my first Sun Ra review here, and for that reason I
did not initially include them in my Bios, Histories &
Discographies section. However, spurred
by the research I did for this piece, I went
back and took another look at them and edited them down into one short piece which includes all the historical and discographical
information which was not used in my review. |
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