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TEXT
FROM A 1989 PRESS KIT BY A&M RECORDS
Eclectic,
outrageous, sometimes mystifying but always imbued with a powerful
jazz consciousness, the music of Sun Ra has withstood its skeptics
and detractors for nearly three generations. And well it should,
since Sun Ra has been both apart of and ahead of the jazz tradition
during that time. Like Duke Ellington and swing-era pioneer Fletcher
Henderson, Sun Ra learned early on to write music in an arranged
form that showcased the specific talents of his individual Arkestra
members, and he has retained the services of some of these musicians
to this day: John Gilmore, Marshall Allen, and Julian Priester
for example since they first joined in the 1950's. On the other
hand, Sun Ra was the first jazz musician to perform on electronic
keyboards (56), the first to pursue full-scale collective improvisation
in a big band setting, and his preoccupation with space travel
as a compositional subject predated bands like Weather Report
by about 15 years.All this from someone who refuses to even cite
the earth as his home planet and prefers to have arrived from
Saturn. As Sun Ra once explained it, "I never wanted to be
a part of planet Earth, but I am compelled to be here, so anything
I do for this planet is because the Master-Creator of the Universe
is making me do it. I am of another dimension. I am on this planet
because people need me".
Equally as mystifying is the fact that Sun Ra has no legal birth
certificate. The Library of Congress claims that he arrived in
Alabama, U.S.A., and his passport states that his legal name is
Le Sony'r Ra, thus making all other names such as Sonny Lee, Sunni
Bhlount, Armand Ra, and H. Sonne Bhlount merely pseudonyms.
In
the 1940's Sun Ra became the house arranger for stage shows at
the famous Chicago night spot, the Club DeLisa and played for
the band led by Fletcher Henderson. Henderson was the arranger
for the Benny Goodman Orquestra as well as his own and was a great
inspiration to Ra who encouraged him to continue writing. In the
early 50's, Ra's more radical compositions and arrangements found
their way into his own groups which featured exotic costumes and
unusual instruments.
By
1955 while in Chicago, Le Sony'r Ra had become "Le Sun Ra"
or Sun Ra, leader of the Solar Arkestra which has also been known
by many other names such as the Myth-Science Arkestra, the Solar
Myth Arkestra, and the Omniverse Arkestra. In addition to saxophonists
Gilmore and Allen, the band boasted a number of musicians who
have contributed much to jazz, including bassist Richard Davis,
trombonist Julian Priester, drummer Clifford Jarvis, and reedman
James Spaulding. The Arkestra itself started as what was thought
to be a hard-bop big band at the Grand Terrace and Birdland night
clubs - a rare enough item - but soon was incorporating free improvisation.
As such, it was a major influence on the emerging avant-garde
jazz musicians in Chicago, such as Muhal Richard Abrams, Henry
Threadgill, and the Art Ensemble of Chicago.
From
its inception, the Arkestra's music was infused with Sun Ra's
unique philosophy, an unexpected hybrid of space-age science fiction
and ancient Egyptian cosmo religious trappings. This philosophy
gained a visual manifestation in the colorful robes, mock-metallic
capes, and space headgear worn by the band (it's the only jazz
orchestra that brings a tailor on tour), and in a stage presentation
that usually features several dancers, a number of group chants
("We travel the spaceways/From planet to planet"), and
at least one instance of the entire band juking its way, single-file,
through the audience.
In
1960, Sun Ra moved his earthbound base of operations to New York,
then in 1968 settled in Philadelphia. In both cities, as in Chicago,
the band lived and worked as a sort of collective, with the hard-core
nucleus sharing living quarters with the leader and assuming the
role of cosmo-friends to the master. Throughout the 60's Sun Ra
continued to record for his own deliberately poorly distributed
Saturn Records label, and also on various European labels, while
touring widely and continuing to spread the fame of his live performances.
In recent years Sun Ra has steadily returned to the music of the
near past - the standards and jazz classics he grew up with -
although it is all filtered through his delighfully off center
perspective.
In
an interview with Jazziz magazine, Sun Ra recalled, "They
really thought I was some kind of kook with all my talk about
outer space and the planets. I'm still talking about it, but governments
are spending billions of dollars to go to Venus, Mars, and other
planets, so it's no longer kooky to talk about space". For
Sun Ra, though, it has never been a matter of mere oddness. When
he talks of his Saturnian origins, of observing the planets and
travelling the spaceways, and of "going into space",
it is really a lavishly elaborated metaphor, or so it seems to
those who are not aware of the spiritual side of things. Sun Ra's
music transcends earthbound limitations by riding the flights
of imagination, and his message is that all of us are free to
ride those flights with him if we have the precision and discipline
to do so.
The
Differences
Sometimes in the amazing ignorance
I hear things and see things
I never knew I saw and heard before
Sometimes in the ignorance
I feel the meaning
Invincible invisible wisdom,
And I commune with intuitive instinct
With the force that made life be
And since it made life be
It is greater than life
And since it let extinction be
It is greater than extinction.
I commune with feelings more than
prayer
For there is nothing else to ask for
That companionship is
And it is superior to any other is.
Sometimes in my amazing ignorance
Others see me only as they care to see
I am to them as they think
According the standard I should not be
And that is the difference between I and them
Because I see them as they are to is
And not the seeming isness of the was.
Sun Ra
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