Sun Ra
Sun Ra (born Herman Poole Blount, legal name Le Sony'r Ra;
May 22, 1914 in Birmingham, Alabama – May 30, 1993 in
Birmingham, Alabama) was a jazz composer, bandleader, piano and
synthesizer player, poet and philosopher known for his "cosmic
philosophy", musical compositions and performances.
"Of all the jazz musicians, Sun Ra was probably the most
controversial," critic Scott Yanow said, due to Sun Ra's
eclectic music and unorthodox lifestyle. Claiming that he was of
the "Angel Race" and not from Earth, but from Saturn, Sun Ra
developed a complex persona of "cosmic" philosophies and lyrical
poetry that made him a pioneer of afrofuturism as he preached
awareness and peace above all. He abandoned his birth name and
took on the name and persona of Sun Ra (Ra being the ancient
Egyptian god of the sun), and used several other names
throughout his career, including Le Sonra and Sonny Lee. Blount
denied any connection with birth name, saying "That's an
imaginary person, never existed … Any name that I use other than
Ra is a pseudonym."
From the mid-1950s to his death, Sun Ra led "The Arkestra", an
ensemble with an ever-changing lineup and name (it was also
called "The Solar Myth Arkestra", "His Cosmo Discipline
Arkestra", the "Blue Universe Arkestra", "The Jet Set Omniverse
Arkestra", and many other permutations; Sun Ra asserted that the
ever-changing name of his ensemble reflected the ever-changing
nature of his music.) His mainstream success was limited, but
Sun Ra was a prolific recording artist and frequent live
performer, Sun Ra's music ranged from keyboard solos to big
bands of over 30 musicians; his music touched on virtually the
entire history of jazz, from ragtime to swing music, from bebop
to free jazz; he was also a pioneer of electronic music, space
music, and free improvisation, and was one of the first
musicians, regardless of genre, to make extensive use of
electronic keyboards.
For decades, very little was known about Sun Ra's early life;
much of it was obscured by Sun Ra himself: he routinely gave
evasive, contradictory or seemingly nonsensical answers to
personal questions and even went so far as to deny his birth
name. Even his birthday was unknown, with years ranging from
1910 to 1918 being claimed for his birth. Only a few years
before his death, the date of Sun Ra's birth remained a mystery:
Jim Macnie's notes for Blue Delight (1989) could only state that
Sun Ra was believed to be about 75 years old. However, Ra's
biographer John F. Szwed was able to uncover a wealth of
information about Ra's early life, including confirming a May
22, 1914 birth date. Named after the popular vaudeville stage
magician Black Herman, who had deeply impressed his mother, Sun
Ra would speculate, only half in jest, that he was distantly
related to Elijah Poole, later famous as Elijah Muhammed, leader
of the Nation of Islam. He was nicknamed "Sonny" from his
childhood, had an older sister and half-brother, and was doted
upon by his mother and grandmother.
Sun Ra's piano technique touched on many styles: his youthful
fascination with boogie woogie, stride piano and blues, a
sometimes refined touch reminiscent of Count Basie or Ahmad
Jamal, and angular phrases in the style of Thelonious Monk or
brutal, percussive attacks like Cecil Taylor. Often overlooked
is the range of influences from classical music—Sun Ra cited
Chopin, Rachmaninoff, Schoenberg and Shostakovich as his
favorite composers for the piano.
As a synthesizer and electric keyboard player, Sun Ra ranks
among one of the earliest and most radical pioneers. By the
mid-1950s, he used a variety of electric keyboards, and almost
immediately, he exploited their potential perhaps more than
anyone, sometimes modifying them himself to produce sounds
rarely if ever heard before. His live albums from the late 1960s
and early 1970s feature some of the noisiest, most bizarre
keyboard work ever recorded. Sun Ra's music can be roughly
divided into three phases, but his records and performances were
full of surprises.
The first period occurred in the 1950s when Sun Ra's music
evolved from big band swing into the outer-space-themed "cosmic
jazz" for which he was best known. Music critics and jazz
historians say some of his best work was recorded during this
period and it is also some of his most accessible music. Sun
Ra's music in this era was often tightly arranged and sometimes
reminiscent of Duke Ellington's, Count Basie's, or other
important swing music ensembles. However, there was a strong
influence from post-swing styles like bebop, hard bop, and modal
jazz, and touches of the exotic and hints of the experimentalism
that would dominate his later music. Notable Sun Ra albums from
the 1950s include Sun Ra Visits Planet Earth, Interstellar Low
Ways, Super-Sonic Jazz, We Travel the Spaceways, The Nubians of
Plutonia and Jazz In Silhouette.
Ronnie Boykins, Sun Ra's bassist, has been described as "the
pivot around which much of Sun Ra's music revolved for eight
years". This is especially pronounced on the key recordings from
1965 (The Magic City, The Heliocentric Worlds of Sun Ra, Volume
One, and The Heliocentric Worlds of Sun Ra, Volume Two) where
the intertwining lines of Boykins' bass and Ra's electronic
keyboards provide cohesion.
After the move to New York, Sun Ra and company plunged headlong
into the experimentalism that they had only hinted at in
Chicago. The music was often extremely loud and the Arkestra
grew to include multiple drummers and percussionists. Recordings
of this era began to utilize new technological possibilities
such as extensive use of tape delay systems to assemble spatial
sound pieces which are far removed from earlier compositions
such as "Saturn". Recordings and live performances often
featured passages for unusual instrumental combinations and
passages of collective playing which point towards free
improvisation—in fact, it is often difficult to tell where the
compositions end and the improvisations begin.
In this era Sun Ra began conducting using hand and body
gestures. This system would inspire cornetist Butch Morris, who
would later develop his own more highly refined way to conduct
improvisers.
Though often associated with avant-garde jazz, Sun Ra did not
believe his work could be classified as "free music": "I have to
make sure that every note, every nuance, is correct. … If you
want to call it that, spell it p-h-r-e, because ph is a definite
article and re is the name of the sun. So I play phre
music—music of the sun."
Seeking to broaden his compositional possibilities, Sun Ra
insisted all band members double on various percussion
instruments—predating world music by drawing on various ethnic
musical forms—and most saxophonists became multireedists, adding
instruments such as flutes, oboes, or clarinets to their
arsenals. In this era, Sun Ra was among the first of any
musicians to make extensive and pioneering use of synthesizers
and other various electronic keyboards; he was given a prototype
Minimoog by its inventor, Robert Moog.
Notable titles from this period include The Magic City, Cosmic
Tones for Mental Therapy, When Sun Comes Out, The Heliocentric
Worlds of Sun Ra, Volume One, Atlantis, Secrets of the Sun and
Other Planes of There.
During their third period, beginning in the 1970s and onward,
Sun Ra and the Arkestra settled down into a relatively
conventional sound, often incorporating swing standards, though
their records and concerts were still highly eclectic and
energetic, and typically included at least one lengthy,
semi-improvised percussion jam. Sun Ra was explicitly asserting
a continuity with the ignored jazz tradition: "They tried to
fool you, now I got to school you, about jazz, all about jazz"
he rapped, framing the inclusion of pieces by Fletcher Henderson
and Jelly Roll Morton.
In the 1970s Sun Ra took a liking to the films of Walt Disney.
He incorporated smatterings of Disney musical numbers into many
of his performances from then on. In the late 1980s the Arkestra
performed a concert at Walt Disney World. The Arkestra's version
of "Pink Elephants on Parade" is available on Stay Awake, a
tribute album of Disney tunes played by various artists and
produced by Hal Willner. A number of Sun Ra's 1970s concerts are
available on CD, but none have received a wide release in
comparison to his earlier music. The album Atlantis can be
considered the landmark that led into his 1970s era.
Some of Sun Ra's songs with words featured lyrics that although
simple, were inspirational and philosophical. The most famous
example was "Space is the Place!". Another example was the song
that went, "You made a mistake. You did something wrong. Make
another mistake, and do something right!". Sometimes (typically
at the end of a set) the entire Arkestra would snake out through
the audience, playing and chanting something like this. Sun Ra
even came up once, behind a frightened young audience member,
grabbed him in a bear hug, and whispered this in his ear, while
the whole band chanted and played along, in a circle around his
table, with the rest of the audience watching on in amusement.
(1978, in a performance in a small short-lived nightclub on City
Line Avenue in Philadelphia).
According to Szwed Sun Ra's view of his relationship to black
people and black cultures "changed drastically" over time.
Initially, Sun Ra identified closely with broader struggles for
black power, black political influence, and black identity, and
saw his own music as a key element in educating and liberating
blacks. But by the heyday of black power radicalism in the
1960s, Sun Ra was expressing disillusionment with these aims,
and he denied feeling closely connected to any race.
Many of Sun Ra's innovations remain important and
groundbreaking: "Ra was one of the first jazz leaders to use two
basses, to employ the electric bass, to play electronic
keyboards, to use extensive percussion and polyrhythms, to
explore modal music and to pioneer solo and group freeform
improvisations. In addition, he made his mark in the wider
cultural context: he proclaimed the African origins of jazz,
reaffirmed pride in black history and reasserted the spiritual
and mystical dimensions of music (all important factors in the
black cultural/political renaissance of the 60s)."
This article is
licensed under the
GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
Wikipedia article "Sun Ra".
Sun Ra links
Buy Sun Ra CDs at Amazon.com
Official Sun Ra Arkestra Website
Saturn Web
Sun Ra Arkive
Sun Ra Discography
Astroblack.com
Earthly extensions
Planet Sun Ra
Sun Ra: Stranger From Outer Space
Sun Ra and His Intergalactic Harmonies
Sun Ra Trading Mailinglist
Sun Ra Photographs
Sun Ra @ JazzyClips.com
Sun Ra @ YouTube











