Music
for the 21st Century: Live at the Uncool Festival
Sun Ra Arkestra | El Ra
Under the capable and deft hand of Marshall Allen, the Sun
Ra Arkestra, against all odds, continues to tour and record.
The band sounds as good as ever, the costumes and stage antics
are still good clean fun, and most Earthlings still havent
caught up.
The
Arkestra, an effective mix of elder members and relative newcomers,
mines the exhaustive, almost Ellingtonian output of music
composed by Sonny Blount (Sun Ra) himself, extending the repertoire
with works by Marshall Allen and Arnold Jenkins. This enormous
body of work covers an impressively wide gamut of styles and
sounds.
For
their early set from their second of three nights at Iridium
last month, the Arkestra began with a customary sun
salutation, chanting the world is waiting for
the sunrise over a hypnotic extended vamp, then reversed
direction with a lively swing chart called The Cosmic
Hop, which sounded just like that. Throughout the hour-and-a-half
set there coursed a strong vein of hard bop and swing, liberally
mixed with modal chants, free and conducted improvisation,
even classic ballad. This would be an ambitious stylistic
range for any band, but the Arkestra handles it all with the
seeming ease of masters.
With
the exception of Ras arrangement of When You Wish
Upon a Star, the Arkestras new release, Music
for the 21st Century, seems preoccupied with music I identify
with the 60srepetitive patterns as vehicles for
solos, leading to interludes of free or conducted improvisations,
all generously laced with roots jazz and swing. Music for
the 21st Century is well recorded and makes a fine document
of the Arkestras current state, but theres no
substitute for the live experience, and I encourage all who
havent already done so to catch this band as soon as
possible. Duke Ellington died while I was still a young man,
blissfully unaware of his monumental achievements and integral
place in American culture. The Arkestra, even without its
inimitable founder, remains a vital part of the culture too,
continuing and augmenting Ras great contributions. There
wont be another band like it.
This
review originally appeared in AllAboutJazz-New York.
Ty Cumbie