Sun Ra in Chronological Order: An Arkestra Listening Thread + Related Solar Sounds

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this was the earliest Ra record I got on vinyl and it definitely feels like the *beginning* of an era

Οὖτις, Monday, 10 February 2020 16:22 (four years ago) link

1963 - When Angels Speak Of Love

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One of the rarest Saturn releases (estimated 150 copies pressed), I thought now would be a good time for this Szwed excerpt:

”Early in the 1960s Sun Ra was in Audiosonic, an independent recording studio in the Brill Building near Times Square, when he ran into one of their engineers, Fred Vargas. Vargas was a Costa Rican who had worked his way up from the garment district to a job in the REL labs with General Edwin Howard Armstrong, the inventor of FM radio, and then on to becoming a recording engineer. Shortly after, Audiosonic was turned into Variety Recording Studio on 225 West 46th Street when it was bought out by Vargas and Warren Smith, an English teacher in Connecticut. Vargas and Smith were intrigued by Sun Ra’s music, and they began to record his small groups […] They extended him long-term credit, living with occasional bounced checks, and helped him cut costs (Sonny often saved fifty dollars by sticking his own blank labels on the records, keeping his cost for a 12-inch LP to 99 cents). Vargas and Smith allowed Sonny to press as few as 100 copies of a record at a time, when most recording companies had a minimum of 500. By handprinting the covers they could avoid printing costs altogether […] For the next thirty years (emphasis mine) Vargas recorded much of Sonny’s music, editing the tapes with him, mastering them, and helping him get his records pressed. He introduced Sonny to people on show business, like Gershon Kingsley […] who later helped Sonny program his first Moog.”

Can we get a hand for Fred Vargas, everyone?

This explains a lot about the territory we’re getting into, where some small-press vinyl editions were not rediscovered until years or decades later, and even then sometimes the recordings themselves predate the time of original release. We’ll get further into that later on in 1964, at the end of the CW era, when we discuss the loose ends.

Bandcamp intro:

When Angels Speak of Love, released in 1966 on Sun Ra's Saturn label, is a rarity, there having been limited pressings (150 copies, by one estimate), which were sold thru the mail and at concerts and club dates. The tracks were taped in New York during two 1963 sessions at the Choreographer's Workshop, a rehearsal space/recording den with warehouse acoustics. Ra spent countless hours at the CW from 1961 to 1964 sharpening the Arkestra during exhaustive musical huddles. John Corbett calls this "one of the most continuous, best-documented periods of Ra's work"; much tape from these seminal sessions has survived and been issued on LP, CD and digitally.

This release wasn’t reissued until last year!! I hadn’t listened until now, as I’m writing this up. It’s way more enjoyable and inventive than I was expecting. I though it was gonna be totally out there like we’re gonna get in the near future, but the real excursions are mostly saved for the epic B-side track. The first track in particular grabbed me, again a very sparse and arresting vibe like the beginning of yesterday’s When Sun Comes Out.

The Bandcamp edition has some newly-discovered stereo versions and a Sun-ra-created stereo edit of the 18-minute “Next Stop Mars.”

AMG review as per Bandcamp:

William Ruhlmann at AllMusic observed, "Sun Ra's music is often described as being so far outside the jazz mainstream as to be less a challenge to it than a largely irrelevant curiosity. But When Angels Speak of Love is very much within then-current trends in jazz as performed by such innovators as John Coltrane and Ornette Coleman. Walter Miller's trumpet on 'The Idea of It All,' for example, indicates he'd been listening to Miles Davis, even as John Gilmore's squealing tenor suggests Coltrane; and, on 'Ecstasy of Being,' what John Corbett calls Danny Davis' 'excruciated alto' suggests Coleman. Ra himself plays busy, seemingly formless passages that are reminiscent of Cecil Taylor. This is a Sun Ra album that is more conventionally unconventional than most, with tracks you could program next to those of his 1960s contemporaries and have them fit right in."

cf. Szwed: “The record jacket carried a poem by Sun Ra […]”

WHEN ANGELS SPEAK

When Angels speak
They speak of cosmic waves of sound
Wavelength infinity
Always touching planets
In opposition outward bound

When Angels speak
They speak on wavelength infinity
Beam cosmos
Synchronizing the rays of darkness
Into visible being
Blackout!
Dark Living Myth-world of being

let's talk about gecs baby (sleeve), Tuesday, 11 February 2020 14:33 (four years ago) link

a lot of "when angels speak of love" was on the blast first "out there a minute" comp, though, right?

you know my name, look up the number of the beast (rushomancy), Tuesday, 11 February 2020 14:40 (four years ago) link

no, just the title track and the 12-minute stereo version of "Next Stop Mars" as far as I can see.

let's talk about gecs baby (sleeve), Tuesday, 11 February 2020 15:33 (four years ago) link

Szwed lists the unreleased tracks from that comp in his discography, but I did not actually realize it had previously-released tunes on it!

let's talk about gecs baby (sleeve), Tuesday, 11 February 2020 15:35 (four years ago) link

this is the kind of thing I was expecting to not be available tbh. I have Out There a Minute but am otherwise unfamiliar with these tracks.

Οὖτις, Tuesday, 11 February 2020 16:04 (four years ago) link

1963 - Cosmic Tones For Mental Therapy

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Fairly well-known, recorded in late 1963 but not released on Saturn until 1967. Repressed several times in the 60s and again in 1973. Later it was part of the Evidence twofer reissue series of the early 90’s, which is where I first heard it (paired with Art Forms Of Dimensions Tomorrow). This one gets out there, but still stays fairly sparse and restrained for totally free music - Szwed refers to “the chamberlike quality.” The second half was recorded live at 10 in the morning at the Tip Top Club in Brooklyn, where Sun Ra could use their Hammond B-3. cf. Szwed “The acoustics are ad hoc, and on "Adventure Equation" the club's phone can be heard ringing during two passages.”

from the Bandcamp version writeup:

“Arkestra saxophonists John Gilmore and Marshall Allen are present, but playing bass clarinet and oboe respectively, while sax is covered by Pat Patrick and brash newcomer Danny Davis. Sunny plays Clavioline and percussion (as do others), but no piano. The Arkestra rarely plays in ensemble mode, but instead alternately deploys in smaller configurations, almost chamber-style.

Tracks are remastered, but no other extra goodies to speak of this time around. For some reason the Bandcamp version does tack on a bonus track recorded a year later, we’ll get to that at the proper time. On to 1964!

sleeve, Wednesday, 12 February 2020 14:51 (four years ago) link

amazing posts, sleeve, thank you.

But guess what? Nobody gives a toot!😂 (Karl Malone), Wednesday, 12 February 2020 15:57 (four years ago) link

had this one for ages - the juxtaposition of sparse instrumentation that sounds at once both composed and improvised was not what I expected from "free jazz" when I first heard this record. It's creaky and shambolic and full of space and silences but it also sounds very intimate.

Οὖτις, Wednesday, 12 February 2020 17:29 (four years ago) link

1962-1964 - Choreographer’s Workshop loose ends (excerpts from The Solar Myth Approach)

https://sunramusic.bandcamp.com/album/the-solar-myth-approach-vol-1

https://sunramusic.bandcamp.com/album/the-solar-myth-approach-vol-2

These reissues (originally issued as a double LP set) actually came out LAST WEEK, since I started this thread back up, as a definitive new remaster on Bandcamp. I’m going to forego c&p-ing the whole insane BYG/Charly/lack-of-documentation-or-provenance story (which you should all read), and give excerpts below.

BYG/Actual were ill-fated, it seems _ I didn’t know any of this previously:

Since the demise of BYG, the Solar-Myth Approach albums have been reissued without legitimacy in a series of ever worsening-quality packages in various formats. The Charly reissues were inferior to the BYG originals (and displayed different cover art), and a dreadful off-pitch, out-of phase 2-CD bootleg appeared on the Fuel label in 2001.

On a qualitative level, this 2020 Cosmic Myth remastering from best-available sources (tapes and discs) constitutes an upgrade.

With regard to today’s listening, four of the tracks from the double LP set are (by best guess) from this era. Essentially, most people used to think these tracks were contemporary to the 1969-70 era, but current research and deep listening has led people-who-should-know to draw new conclusions, dating four of the tracks on these two 1971 LPs to the CW years, 1962-64. Specifically:

Michael D. Anderson of the Sun Ra Music Archive believes (and we concur) that "They'll Come Back" (from Vol. 1) and "Ancient Ethiopia" (from Vol. 2) were recorded either in Chicago, or at the Choreographer's Workshop in the first years after Ra settled in New York. Compared to everything else on the Solar-Myth Approach, the tight arrangements of "They'll Come Back" and "Ancient Ethiopia" are outliers. They do not sound like anything Sun Ra produced in the late 1960s—but they do sound comparable to his arrangements from the late 1950s and early 1960s.

Reconsidering "They'll Come Back" in 2019, Campbell remarked, "I’d say Choreographers Workshop 1963–1965." […]Anderson also believes that "Realm of Lightning" (Vol. 1) and "The Utter Nots" (Vol. 2) originated at Choreographer's, in 1962 and 1964 respectively.

So, like the Out There A Minute release, the Solar Myth albums are grab bags of tapes, best illustrated by this excerpt from the Bandcamp writeup:

In a 2019 conversation, Ra historian/authority John Corbett explained that when Sun Ra and the Arkestra toured in the late 1960s and '70s, the bandleader often lugged along a cumbersome tape deck and a suitcase of open-reel tapes, which he would review during leisure time on the road. These tapes were a smorgasbord of styles, sessions, and band configurations from random periods in Ra's recorded history. According to Corbett, in several highly likely instances during overseas tours, Ra needed funds for return airfare or travel expenses, and would sell such tapes (or copies thereof) to European labels—a quick hand-off deal. Tape documentation could be scarce-to-non-existent, which would prompt labels to guess dates, titles, and personnel, or rely on skimpy (or fabricated) info provided by Ra. It's highly possible that BYG acquired the Solar-Myth tapes in this fashion.

This also accounts for the era-jumbled messiness of e.g. the Pictures Of Infinity LP on Black Lion, among others. I’ll try to slot the various tracks from these into the playlist where I can, given the sources available for dating them.

I’ve added the four tracks discussed above to the Spotify playlist. We’ll keep going into 1964 tomorrow, with the major work of the year.

sleeve, Thursday, 13 February 2020 14:44 (four years ago) link

the BYG/Actuel editions of vol 1 and 2 were some of the first vinyl Ra albums I was able to get (after Heliocentric Worlds, which always seemed to be in print) so they shaped my earliest impressions of Ra's ouevre. Had no idea any of these tracks dated from the early 60s though!

Οὖτις, Thursday, 13 February 2020 16:10 (four years ago) link

love the celeste (?) intro/interludes on "They'll Come Back". just an instrument I always love to hear.

Οὖτις, Thursday, 13 February 2020 16:17 (four years ago) link

1964 - Other Planes Of There

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In Szwed’s book it refers to the original cover being the pink/blue color scheme above, but none of the early Discogs listings show that. What the hell, I like to imagine this was how it was first issued.

Recorded in early 1964 at the CW, released as an LP on Saturn in 1966. Only repressed once, that same year, and then out of print until the 1992 Evidence CD.

I got this a few years back when I went on an LP buying spree triggered by those newer cheap (bootleg?) Scorpio reissue pressings (they are $12 each new at my local store), but I think I played it once to rip it and then filed it, feeling unimpressed. On probably my second listen, it’s hard for me to see it as anything other than “The Magic City: Take One” as it follows the same format of a side-long 1st track and then a few (mostly long) tracks on the B-side. The 22-minute title track seems kinda unfocused to me, like a collection of solos strung together. Then a long mostly percussive improv, and a small-unit track called “Sketch” that’s really close to the earlier post-bop sounds. There’s a brief respite from the free swirl with the seasick quasi-ballad “Pleasure”, then “Spiral Galaxy,” a long (seemingly latin-influenced? I’m not a theorist) stately march-type thing to round it off - I much prefer the B-side tracks but I might just need more time with the epic. The Bandcamp version is remastered, but no extra tracks or anything. They say:

Rehearsing and recording at the Choreographer's Workshop gave ample time to develop ideas without a nudgy A&R exec watching the clock or chiseling the budget. This self-controlled environment (and the usual ad hoc recording quality) marks Other Planes. The arrangements breathe, they evolve unhurriedly, and there's much open space. This is music by process. In contrast to the muscularity of free jazz, Sun Ra's leader-directed improvisations have an orchestrated feel, a pace that juxtaposes the pastoral with sporadic bursts of frenzy and much rhythmic variety. Sunny's love of percussion permeates these sessions. The works proceed with great deliberation, but they move.

The cover most people know (and the one I have) is this one:

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On June 15, 1964, Sun Ra and a 15-piece band (the largest he had played with since Chicago) were booked at the Cellar Cafe, a coffeehouse on West 91st Street. Per Szwed:

“The crowd which turned out for this concert and one by Archie Shepp encouraged Dixon to stage a four-night festival of “the new thing,” a music still too new to be named or defined, but which was audaciously emerging in the face of a resistant jazz mainstream.”

This results in the formation of the Jazz Composers Guild, and some fortuitous connections will come from that later on.

sleeve, Friday, 14 February 2020 14:43 (four years ago) link

ha that pink and blue sleeve always makes me think of the eye-bleeding color schemes of early Stereolab sleeves

Οὖτις, Friday, 14 February 2020 16:06 (four years ago) link

1964 - Judson Hall, New York, Dec. 31, 1964 (Sun Ra With Pharoah Sanders and Black Harold)

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Recorded as part of the “Four Days In December” concert series put on by the short-lived Jazz Composers’ Guild, released as an LP on Saturn in 1976, after two previous failed attempts to issue it. Some wild piano flourishes lead into a full fledged horn battle, and the music remains mostly free.

The Bandcamp version has what I think is the complete show, or near to it, with a lot of extra material added, as well as exhaustive notes on the gig. I was previously unfamiliar with this one. Clifford Jarvis continues to be a total badass on drums. John Gilmore was working somewhere else during this gig (see Bandcamp writeup) and is not present.

Important side note: In the audience at this gig was ESP label boss Bernard Stollman, and he liked what he heard. Soon he would put out the first non-Saturn LP since 1961.

sleeve, Monday, 17 February 2020 14:42 (four years ago) link

before the reissues pharaoh sanders and black harold was one of the hardest ra albums to find bootleg copies of - as far as the "free jazz" era is concerned this is one of my favorite documents of it

Kate (rushomancy), Monday, 17 February 2020 15:01 (four years ago) link

MONDAY NIGHT INTERLUDE (added to Spotify)

"Twilight" - 1964-65

"Twilight," a previously unreleased recording that might have originated at the Tip-Top Club, is marred by significant noise, possibly from poor storage, tape degradation, or sub-par recording conditions. The track may have appeared on an obscure Saturn release or demo, as the surface noise sounds like a poor vinyl pressing or an acetate cutting. The instrumentation sounds like celeste, oboe, French horn, and percussion. Sunny had just two regular French horn players over the years, and Vincent Chancey wasn’t yet on the scene. That leaves Robert Northern as the only other possibility, which would date the track to late 1964 or early 1965.

Bandcamp link (track 6)

sleeve, Tuesday, 18 February 2020 05:53 (four years ago) link

this sounds fine to me, and is lovely to boot

sleeve, Tuesday, 18 February 2020 05:54 (four years ago) link

hey everyone I'm taking a break today, also I still need to listen to the last half of the Judson Hall concert

sleeve, Tuesday, 18 February 2020 15:31 (four years ago) link

thank you! i'm doing some massive catching up

But guess what? Nobody gives a toot!😂 (Karl Malone), Tuesday, 18 February 2020 16:03 (four years ago) link

never heard Twilight or the Judson Hall show before

Οὖτις, Tuesday, 18 February 2020 16:14 (four years ago) link

Solar Myth Approach Vol. 1 is an old favorite of mine. Adventures of Bugs Hunter! Great news about the new remasters.

J. Sam, Tuesday, 18 February 2020 22:47 (four years ago) link

this "Discipline 9" from the Judson Hall show is very pleasing, it's long and spacy. Karl asked earlier what the setlists were like, well this is the earliest example I know of - the next live things come in '66.

sleeve, Wednesday, 19 February 2020 05:28 (four years ago) link

forgot to post before I left the house and my post is at home in a text file.

so everyone gets one more day of listening before starting 1965.

sleeve, Wednesday, 19 February 2020 15:44 (four years ago) link

"Magic City" not on Spotify :(

Hongro Hongro Hippies (Myonga Vön Bontee), Thursday, 20 February 2020 00:55 (four years ago) link

Filed under "Sun Ra & His Arkestra"
https://open.spotify.com/album/4hqD5lN02dq75HeiP9TtNf?si=hHoIiEKASWOLMnM90b62LQ

J. Sam, Thursday, 20 February 2020 01:16 (four years ago) link

we're not there yet! :D

sleeve, Thursday, 20 February 2020 02:17 (four years ago) link

(Heliocentric comes next, it was completed in April and Magic City wasn't finished until May)

I'm gonna go ahead and post that in an hour or two, still not home.

sleeve, Thursday, 20 February 2020 02:19 (four years ago) link

1965 - The Heliocentric Worlds Of Sun Ra

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Szwed:

After meeting Bernard Stollman during the October Revolution, Sun Ra asked him to come and hear the Arkestra at a loft in Newark, and once he did, Stollman quickly agreed to record them.

I don’t think Ra was quite finished with The Magic City when this session took place, so I’m starting 1965 here. I can’t pin down an actual release date for the LP on ESP, but I think it was earlier in 1965.

I was previously unfamiliar with this one, although it is one of the best known as far as I can tell. Again, lots of emphasis on percussion and space.

From the “Sun Ra Sunday” blog:


Heliocentric Worlds Vol. 1 is rightfully considered a landmark recording and belongs in every serious record collection. It has remained pretty much consistently available (either legitimately or on bootleg editions) since the day it was released and its appearance transformed Sun Ra from the obscure Lower East Side eccentric into his rightful role as the globe-trotting emissary of interplanetary music. Heliocentric Worlds, Vol. 1 is, in a word, a masterpiece, but just one of a series of extraordinary recordings that Ra would make during this period.

sleeve, Thursday, 20 February 2020 04:29 (four years ago) link

after my third time through, I finally realized... there isn't really a drummer here! just various members on timpani, bells, wood block, "cymbal [spiral]," and "percussion" (by Jimhmi Johnson on tracks A3 and B1 only). still lots of space, though.

sleeve, Thursday, 20 February 2020 06:08 (four years ago) link

1965 - The Magic City

https://f4.bcbits.com/img/a4103873125_10.jpg

A personal side note: Although I think the first Sun Ra I heard was Blue Delight, this was one of the first as well, a friend gifted me the 1973 Impulse reissue back in like 1992 (it turns out that it is more of the reprocessed-stereo garbage that is typical of the Impulse reissue series, see the earlier “Black Beauty” entry). But that 1973 edition still has my favorite cover design, hey why not hotlink them both:

https://img.discogs.com/nsM_qDlIi3anpjy1dja1P7LjB2o=/fit-in/600x600/filters:strip_icc():format(jpeg):mode_rgb():quality(90)/discogs-images/R-1037601-1229183494.jpeg.jpg

Recorded in April-May (side 2) and Sept. 24th (side 1) of 1965, released as a mono LP on Saturn in 1966, repressed twice (on Saturn and “subsidiary” label Thoth) in the 60s, reissued as part of the Impulse reissue program of the early 70s, again via the Evidence CD reissues in the 90s, and now finally in a definitive 21st century stereo version (see below).

What this most reminds me of is a symphony. It is so meticulously organized (is it composed? I’m not sure), it has so many moods. Is it jazz? I guess so, but largely because of the instrumentation used to make the music. Basically, what we are hearing in these recordings is musical telepathy by people who had been playing together for years.

Obviously this record is a goddam masterpiece, but all of you absolutely need to listen to the new STEREO remaster that the Bandcamp/Enterplanetary people put out in 2017:

"With supplemental material from the original tapes, the best possible sound and detailed research, this could be the single-disc reissue of the year." — NYC Jazz Record, Oct. 2017

https://sunramusic.bandcamp.com/album/the-magic-city-cd-lp-digital

In fact, I’m just gonna C&P most of the Bandcamp writeup:

Sun Ra albums like THE MAGIC CITY prove the categorical futility of "File Under: Jazz." When assessing the post-Chicago (1960–on) work of Ra, "jazz" turns out to be less a genre than a journalistic and marketing convenience. Jazz has a glorious tradition. Sun Ra was schooled in it, emerged from it, and grew to transcend it (though he never abandoned it). Even the cheeky term "Space Jazz" cannot frame the extremes to which Ra pushed his art in the mid-1960s. In this regard, THE MAGIC CITY was a pinnacle.

1965 was a turbulent year for the Arkestra and its leader, and many consider THE MAGIC CITY a flashpoint for that upheaval. Arkestra drummer Tommy Hunter, quoted in John Szwed's 1997 Ra bio SPACE IS THE PLACE, describes a typical performance of the period: "It was like a fire storm coming off the bandstand."

On the original 1965 THE MAGIC CITY LP, issued on Saturn, the monster 27-1/2 minute title track sprawled across side A. The "Magic City" to which Ra refers was his birthplace—Birmingham, Alabama. The term was the town's motto, emblazoned on a billboard by the train station near Sunny's childhood home, intended to reflect the city's explosive growth as a Southern industrial epicenter after the discovery of iron ore, coal, and limestone deposits. Birmingham was a place about which Sun Ra felt and expressed ambivalence: an outpost of racial segregation and grim smokestack-pocked landscapes, yet a city for which he felt twinges of nostalgia and affection. (His heirs still live in the area.)

Ra customarily supervised the Arkestra's improvisational process via keyboard cues or hand signals. He was always in charge—hence critic Simon Adams describing the title track as "27 minutes of controlled freedom." "The Magic City" was never performed in concert; saxophonist John Gilmore said it was "unreproducible, a tapestry of sound."

Although shorter in scope than side A's magnum opus, the four works on THE MAGIC CITY's flip side reflect the same improvisational approach, spatiality, and lack of structure. One session outtake, "Other Worlds," an alternate version of "Shadow World," is included as a bonus track. Also included are the final 90 seconds of the mono version, which were curiously omitted from Ra's own stereo version. .

-- THE MAGIC CITY: THE DEFINITIVE STEREO EDITION --

First-generation Saturn pressings of The Magic City were monophonic. The album was reissued on CD by Evidence in 1993 with the title track in mono and the LP side B tracks in stereo. A full stereo version had been issued on Sun Ra's Thoth subsidiary label sometime after 1969; however, it suffered from a technical flaw that prevented many copies of the LP from tracking cleanly through the first cut on side B. A 1973 gatefold LP reissue on Impulse featured reprocessed stereo, and a cheap, terrible-sounding bootleg LP—on a badly replicated "Saturn" label—has circulated in recent years. For this definitive reissue, Cosmic Myth Records used stereo sources which are superior to the Thoth pressing.

The “Sun Ra Sundays” blog (recommended reading, I’m gonna try to link/excerpt going forward) also has some good notes:

Ra had been working with the material that would become “The Shadow World” at least as far back as “The Outer Heavens” (on Art Forms of Dimensions Tomorrow) and it appears in rough form on Sun Ra Featuring Pharoah Sanders and Black Harold (there titled, “The World Shadow”). Here, the fiendishly difficult composition gets its first complete performance. A complex unison melody for saxophones is set off against a 7/4 rhythm and Ra’s contrary, angular piano. After a brief series of solos, saxophones return with the melody while trumpet states the counter-melody originally intimated by the piano. Szwed writes: “Sun Ra took considerable pleasure from the agitated difficulty of the piece, and noted that once during a rehearsal for a French TV show the producer was so disturbed by it that he threatened to cancel the show if they insisted on playing it” (p. 215). “The Shadow World” would become a fixture of the Arkestra’s live sets going forward, often performed at impossibly fast tempos.

sleeve, Thursday, 20 February 2020 14:50 (four years ago) link

for some reason Magic City is one I never got around to before. Heliocentric Worlds I know v well, in contrast.

Οὖτις, Thursday, 20 February 2020 16:36 (four years ago) link

Thanks for the Magic City spotify link upthread; I was searching for the studio "Shadow World" last month but could only find the College Tour live version...? I see the 2017 version has an alternate take of "Other Worlds", from the Heliocentric sessions.

Very enjoyable thread btw, valuable info.

Hongro Hongro Hippies (Myonga Vön Bontee), Thursday, 20 February 2020 19:29 (four years ago) link

thank you! nice to see you in here.

sleeve, Thursday, 20 February 2020 19:34 (four years ago) link

also Myonga there is a Spotify playlist for the whole thread:

https://open.spotify.com/user/weinventyou/playlist/4dAK9bNAV6C8zrf9twZpk3

sleeve, Thursday, 20 February 2020 19:35 (four years ago) link

Thanks sleeve!

Hongro Hongro Hippies (Myonga Vön Bontee), Thursday, 20 February 2020 21:58 (four years ago) link

1965 - The Heliocentric Worlds Of Sun Ra Vol. 2 (and Vol. 3, and The Sun Myths)

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https://1.bp.blogspot.com/_8tRUd669B4I/SiMGYVlORpI/AAAAAAAAA30/HUM2Vh5OPr4/s1600/Heliocentric+v3.jpg

https://f4.bcbits.com/img/a1841569126_10.jpg

Moving on into 1965, remember that The Magic City hadn’t been released yet. Also, everyone should listen to it! But at this time, Heliocentric Vol. 1 had just come out and was making waves.

Recorded in November, I assume this was a followup to the relative success of the first? From the Szwed book:

As soon as the ESPs were issued, Willis Conover, a Voice of America disc jockey, began to play them nightly on his jazz show aimed at Europe, where an intensely loyal following began to develop. […]And then out of the blue Alton Abraham suddenly released a flood of Saturn records which had been recorded over the last few years - Angels and Demons at Play, Fate in a Pleasant Mood, Art Forms of Dimensions Tomorrow, and Secrets of the Sun.

To go along with that, here is a flood of material, three albums worth (with one long track in different versions). I am gonna dive into this stuff over the weekend.

Detailed “Sun Ra Sundays” notes on Vol. 2 are here:

https://nuvoid.blogspot.com/2009/05/sun-ra-sunday_17.html

and regarding Heliocentric Worlds Vol. 3:

In 2005, ESP-Disk’ released Heliocentric Worlds Vol.3: The Lost Tapes, purported to be unreleased material recorded at the November 16, 1965 session that produced Heliocentric Worlds Vol.2. After some close listening, I am pretty certain this date is incorrect, although some of this material might have been recorded at the April 20th session for Heliocentric Worlds, Vol.1 (but then again, maybe not). Confusing? Yes! But these are the eternal mysteries of Mr. Ra! Nevertheless, the discovery of previously unheard music from the nineteen-sixties makes this CD essential listening for the Ra-fanatic.[…]

Is it possible that Heliocentric Worlds Vol.1, side-2 of The Magic City and tracks 2-5 of Heliocentric Worlds Vol.3 were all recorded at the same session on April 20, 1965? For that matter, is it possible that When Angels Speak of Love was also recorded during this time period? NARRATOR: I don’t think so The stylistic resemblances are striking and, taken together, all of this music demonstrates how intently Ra was developing his composed improvisational approach in the mid-nineteen-sixties. Heliocentric Worlds Vol.3 adds another fascinating piece to the puzzle, yet ultimately raises more questions than it answers.

https://nuvoid.blogspot.com/2009/05/sun-ra-sunday_31.html

Then we have the alternate takes and outtakes collected on the Bandcamp release “Sun Myth (African Chant)”:

A quartet of rare 1965 tracks from the Sun Ra Music Archive. The early version of "The Sun Myth," featuring a soundtrack of African chanting underneath the Arkestra's studio performance, appeared on the first pressing of The Heliocentric Worlds of Sun Ra, Vol. 2. However, the chant is absent from the more commonly known commercial mix of the title. In fact, before it was removed from the mix entirely, the chant was mixed lower on the album's second pressing; it could be heard, but distantly. On the third pressing — no chant! How it came to be included in the first place was presumably Sun Ra's decision, and anybody's guess why. The origins of the recording are unknown, and as to why it was removed — see previous sentence. No documentation has been found explaining the evolution of the respective mixes.

https://sunramusic.bandcamp.com/album/the-sun-myth-african-chant

Also note:

After the digital release of Sun Myth (African Chant) in 2016, further research affirmed that "Interplanetary Travelers" had originated from the sessions for the album The Magic City, and the track was included on the definitive Cosmic Myth Records 2017 LP/CD reissue of that classic 1965 Sun Ra title.

Over the weekend I’m gonna try and write something more about late 1965 to early 1966, there’s a lot of stuff that happened during this time frame, plus some side projects.

sleeve, Friday, 21 February 2020 14:49 (four years ago) link

some listening thoughts on the last batch:

I used to have Heliocentric 2 on vinyl, but I sold it. I don't regret that after re-listening, it's a little unfocused to my ears. On the other hand, the 1st-press "Sun Myth" mix with the African chant works perfectly as an epic side-long track. Go figure. I have no idea why it was removed.

I had to skip my first track in this project, the lead track on Heliocentric 3. Horns squeal, drums flail, I get bored. But I was then rewarded with some really phenomenal small-unit tracks for the rest of the record, I actually prefer this to Vol. 2 by a wide margin.

The other outtakes from The Sun Myth are enjoyable as well, big band tracks but coherent and integrated, definitely composed, and of a piece with the Magic City sound.

My offhand top ten of the 1961-1965 NYC era would be:

Futuristic Sounds
Invisible Shield/What's New
Magic City
When Sun Comes Out
Bad And Beautiful
Heliocentric 1
Judson Hall
Other Planes Of There
Secrets Of The Sun
The Sun Myth (African Chant)

Am I going too fast for people? Let me know. I've been able to listen to everything so far at this pace. Jamming Heliocentric 3 in the hot tub with a beer is a special kind of relaxation.

sleeve, Sunday, 23 February 2020 05:26 (four years ago) link

"The Shadow World" is one of the most difficult Ra compositions for me to understand; it's like one of those old Magic Eye photos - I just cannot hear the melody in there unless I'm listening to the right version with the right star alignment. Honestly, about this point Ra sort of loses me until June Tyson comes onboard.

Kate (rushomancy), Sunday, 23 February 2020 16:07 (four years ago) link

1965 - Strange Strings

https://f4.bcbits.com/img/a2696443971_10.jpg

Another staggering achievement. Generally thought to have been recorded in 1966 but the newest sources say 1965 (I don’t know why, and the Bandcamp page doesn’t say, conventional wisdom was that the instruments were bought during the 1966 college tour of upstate NY and the page even repeats that detail). Again, who the fuck knows, we’re doing our best with dates here and it feels kinda right to revise this particular release in the timeline. It sure sounds more like The Magic City than it sounds like Nothing Is (from May 1966).

Released as an LP on Saturn in 1967, then languishing in relative neglect for 40 years (skipped by the 90s Evidence CD series) until a 2007 Atavistic CD reissue.

The definitive new 2014 version on Bandcamp and Spotify features an entire album’s worth of additional material. The album seems to have made quite the comeback buzz-wise from my admittedly limited vantage point. This is another sui generis exercise like the title track of Magic City, it has more in common with AMM than jazz imo.

After a series of concerts at upstate New York colleges (sic), Sun Ra purchased an arsenal of stringed instruments from curio shops and music stores on the road: ukulele, mandolin, koto, kora, Chinese lutes, and what he termed "Moon Guitars." In the studio, these were handed out to his reed and horn players in the belief that "strings could touch people in a special way." That the Arkestra members didn't know how to play these instruments was not beside the point—it was the point. Sun Ra called it "A study in ignorance." To this unconventional "string section" he added several prepared homemade instruments, including a large piece of tempered sheet metal on which was chiseled the letter "X." Art Jenkins was assigned intermittent improvised vocals.

Biographer John Szwed explains what happened next: "Marshall Allen said that when they began to record, the musicians asked Sun Ra what they should play, and he answered only that he would point to them when he wanted them to start. The result is an astonishing achievement, a musical event which seems independent of all other musical traditions and histories. The music was recorded at high volume, laden with selectively applied echo, so that all of the instruments bleed together and the stringed instruments sound as if they, too, were made of sheet metal. The piece is all texture, with no sense of tonality except where Art Jenkins sings through a metal megaphone with a tunnel voice. But to say that the instruments seem out of tune misses the point, since there is no 'tune,' and in any case the Arkestra did not know how to tune most of the instruments."

Check the extensive Bandcamp notes, apparently a double album was planned for 2018 release with even more material.

sleeve, Monday, 24 February 2020 14:31 (four years ago) link

this era's all very familiar to me. Re-listened to Heliocentric World V. 2 last night - was unaware that there were so many versions of The Sun Myth (I've never heard the African chant one). Album is okay in general but nothing special.

Strange Strings otoh is something of a bizarre anomaly, just in the instrumentation. I have to be in a certain mood for that one.

Οὖτις, Monday, 24 February 2020 20:59 (four years ago) link

1965-66 side project interlude

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https://f4.bcbits.com/img/a0844597141_10.jpg

Two minor side projects added to the Spotify playlist. First, the late-1965 LP by the Walt Dickerson Quartet featuring Ra on piano (and arrangements I think). Nice mellow vibraphone cocktail jazz. Then we have some excerpts from the infamous Batman cash-in LP done in January 1966 with Tom Wilson producing and including Blues Project folks, weirdly only three tracks are on Spotify but the whole album is on Bandcamp.

Ra plays organ, replacing Al Kooper himself who turned it down (the rest of his band was happy to get a check). Ra brought along Gilmore and Patrick to play sax. I love this record! It has been widely bootlegged and I have a shitty vinyl copy. NANANANANANANANA BATMAAAAAAN.

This moves us into 1966, and one of the most important things that happens in this timeframe is that the Arkestra gets a weekly gig (on Mondays) at Slug’s Saloon starting in March 1966 that would continue every Monday for the next 18 months, and on and off until 1972, resulting in ever-increasing exposure.

from Szwed:

”And the musicians came. Cannonball Adderley, Jimmy Heath, Philly Joe Jones, and Art Blakey showed up. Dizzy Gillespie came (and as Sun Ra walked past, Dizzy leaned toward him and was heard to say, “Keep it up, Sonny, they tried to do the same shit to me”). One night Art Farmer, Mingus, Coltrane, and Monk all showed up. In fact Monk came a number of times, sometimes in the company of the Baroness Nica, who continued to be a doubter.”

sleeve, Tuesday, 25 February 2020 14:41 (four years ago) link

1966 - Nothing Is (and associated tour)

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Recorded in May 1966, released (as an edited version of a long 2-set evening) that same year as an LP on the ESP label. Reissued many times since then with ever-increasing amounts of bonus material, ending up with a double CD’s worth.

The ”1966 St. Lawrence” release on Bandcamp is, as I understand it, the first set of two, and the 2nd set was edited into Nothing Is - which is, confusingly not available via Bandcamp (the whole thing is on Spotify). It’s probably some weird rights thing with ESP, whatever. These recordings provide the most exhaustive live document of the band so far. I added the full double CD version to the Spotify playlist.

As per the Bandcamp writeup:

In Spring 1966 Sun Ra and his Arkestra embarked on a tour of five upstate New York colleges. Recorded on May 18, 1966, at St. Lawrence University, in Potsdam, NY, this illuminating collection presents the full 70-minute first set, a partial recording of the evening's second set, and some pre-concert, soundcheck rehearsal takes.

The nature of the somewhat ad hoc 1966 engineering setup prevented a best-quality audio capture, and there are technical shortcomings in these recordings. Nonetheless, this historic set offers a spectrum of the band's repertoire, arrangements, and stage virtuosity over almost an entire evening. The performance roughly coincides with the 10th anniversary of the Arkestra's debut studio sessions in Chicago, 1956. The sets include the rarely performed "State Street," as well as alternate versions of "Theme of the Stargazers," "The Exotic Forest," "Velvet," and "The Second Stop Is Jupiter." The tour reportedly included SUNY Buffalo, Syracuse University, and several other unidentified colleges.

According to longtime Ra percussionist Tommy Hunter, the Arkestra often worked with two drummers during this period. A second drummer is audible on these recordings, but he is not identified in existing tour recording documentation. Saxophonist John Gilmore suggested Roger Blank or Jimmy Johnson as the second drummer.

This is the first known live recording since the Judson Hall/Black Harold show almost 18 months earlier. There may be even more recordings from this tour (Syracuse is mentioned) but only two nights have surfaced so far - the St. Lawrence College shows (early and late) that were edited into Nothing Is, and a show in Buffalo that is partially available in physical form only (no digital anywhere that I could find) on (again) the UK-only Art Yard label - in this case a 10” vinyl record.

https://f4.bcbits.com/img/a3982250053_10.jpg

https://img.discogs.com/AojZuA8ELzgDEJc-5pDRWfKVDhQ=/fit-in/600x592/filters:strip_icc():format(jpeg):mode_rgb():quality(90)/discogs-images/R-5462658-1393982817-1385.jpeg.jpg

This is a big chunk of sound, so I’m gonna take a break for a day or two as I only just got through re-listening to Strange Strings (which reminded me of some early Nurse With Wound and Anima as well as AMM this time around). Feel free to weigh in! We have around 125 records to go, by my rough count. So posting every few days will result in over a year of listening.

sleeve, Wednesday, 26 February 2020 14:38 (four years ago) link

welp, that's my year, scheduled!

the year of the ear: sun ra 2020

i am enjoying the pace but am floundering a little bit. after spending so much time in the 1950-62 years, it's taking me a while to adjust to the new sounds. this thread is pretty much the #1 resource in the world (imo), a godsend

But guess what? Nobody gives a toot!😂 (Karl Malone), Wednesday, 26 February 2020 16:12 (four years ago) link

the Walt Dickerson and Batman records are great palate cleansers if you're burned out on the skronk :)

sleeve, Wednesday, 26 February 2020 20:05 (four years ago) link

Yeah, love hearing anomalies like those or the doo-wop tracks pop up on the Spotify playlist during shuffle.

Been listening to said playlist for days now; it's wonderful hearing a decade's worth of evolution laid out in the proper chronology.

Hongro Hongro Hippies (Myonga Vön Bontee), Thursday, 27 February 2020 01:36 (four years ago) link

1966 - Monorails And Satellites

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A nice conceptual and musical break here. Sun Ra piano solo albums are quite rare in the overall discography, and this is the first example to surface. Recorded in 1966, the first volume was released as an LP on Saturn in 1973, and the second volume in 1974. Volume Three was only released last year in January (almost 53 years after the original recordings) as part of a complete set.

As per Bandcamp:
A tape of a third, unreleased volume was discovered posthumously by Michael D. Anderson of the Sun Ra Music Archive. Released here for the first time, it consists of five originals and four standards, and was recorded in stereo.

Bandcamp also sez:

The playing here speaks less of a style, and more of a collection of statements. Some of the tunes, with their odd juxtapositions of mood, could be mistaken for silent film scores. Perhaps they were audio notebooks, a way to generate ideas which could be developed with the band ("I think orchestra"). Regardless of any secondary (and admittedly speculative) intent, they serve as compelling standalone works. The fingering reflects Sun Ra's encyclopedic knowledge of piano history as his passages veer from stride to swing, from barrelhouse to post-bop, from march to Cecil Taylor-esque free flights, with a bit of soothing "candelabra" swank thrown in. Sunny's attack is mercurial, his themes unpredictable. His hands can be primitive or playful, then abruptly turn sensitive and elegant. As with the whole of Sun Ra's recorded legacy, you get everything but consistency and predictability.

The listener also experiences something rare in the Sun Ra recorded omniverse: intimacy. His albums, generally populated by the rotating Arkestral cast, are raucous affairs. With the Monorails sessions, we eavesdrop on private moments: the artist, alone with his piano. These are brief audio snapshots of what was surely a substantial part of Sun Ra's life, infinitesimal surviving scraps of 100,000 hours similarly spent, most lost to posterity.

These compositions do seem meandering sometimes, but they have a nice flow. Improvised? Aside from “Easy Street” and the tracks on Volume Three, it would appear so. From “Sun Ra Sundays’:

While Sun Ra is highly regarded as a pioneer of electric keyboards in jazz, his prodigious gifts as a pianist have largely been overlooked, obscured by and subsumed within the Arkestra’s overall musical activities. Monorails and Satellites is one of the very few solo piano recordings Ra ever made and it is a fascinating document of his instrumental technique and singular musical thinking. Ra does not possess a dazzling virtuosity, but he approaches the piano as an immense orchestra, full of vibrant colors and contrasting timbres. Like a child at play, Ra delights in the resonant rumbling of the lowest octaves and the plinking, chattering chimes of the highest notes above. But Ra’s two-hand independence is sometimes truly astonishing: each hand in a different meter, in a different key, ten fingers layering multiple outer and inner melodies to create complex rhythmic/harmonic webs. Ra’s touch is aggressive yet supple, achieving illusionistic “bent” note effects.

https://nuvoid.blogspot.com/2009/07/sun-ra-sunday.html

From that same link:

Ra’s discography gets very confusing at this point, with various albums containing material recorded at different times and places, with a slew of singles thrown in to boot. This sort of confusion continues until well into the nineteen-seventies!

Yep, that will become very clear with the next entry…

sleeve, Friday, 28 February 2020 14:48 (four years ago) link

Welcome back, earthlings. If your ears are weary of major statements like 2-hour college sets or triple LPs of solo piano, how about some sketchbook collections of “inside” performances harking back to the Chicago era?

1966 - Pictures Of Infinity a.k.a Outer Spaceways Incorporated (referred to here as POI) and Outerspaceways Inc. a.k.a A Tonal View Of Tomorrow Vol. 3 a.k.a. Spaceways (referred to here as “Spaceways”)

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It now becomes clear that full engagement with the Sun Ra discography is like reading the Necronomicon, it drives people to madness. Here’s the “Sun Ra Sunday” entries for these two “albums” (really a collection of random tapes, afaict), I’m including them both, even with repetitive parts, because it gives you the full clusterfuck picture (also, they have different and relevant bits of info). This guy gets really frustrated! I don’t blame him.

for “Pictures Of Infinity”:

This is yet another record with a horribly tortured history. In 1971, Sun Ra sold a stash of tapes to Alan Bates of the German label, Black Lion, who shortly thereafter issued this album under the title, Pictures of Infinity. A 1994 CD reissue added a previously unreleased bonus track (“Intergalactic Motion”) and all cuts were again reissued in 1998 on the three-CD box set, Calling Planet Earth (Freedom 7612), but there the album is stupidly re-titled Outer Spaceways Incorporated. I say stupidly because a 1974 album originally titled Outer Spaceways Incorporated (Saturn 14300A+B) was also re-issued in the same box set and inexplicably re-titled Spaceways, thereby creating all kinds of unnecessary discographical confusion. Be that as it may, this album (whatever its title) is drawn from an excellent stereo recording of a live performance in New York City circa. 1968 and provides a rare, hi-fi glimpse of the newly evolving “cosmo drama.”
https://nuvoid.blogspot.com/2009/09/sun-ra-sunday_27.html

(Keep in mind that these recordings have now been dated to 1966 - this blog entry is from 2009)

for “Outerspaceways Inc.” a.k.a “A Tonal View Of Times Tomorrow Vol. 3” a.k.a. “Spaceways”:

This record certainly has a tortured discographical history! In December, 1971, Sun Ra sold a cache of tapes to the Black Lion label so as to pay the Arkestra’s traveling expenses from Denmark to Egypt. Sadly, much of this music was never released. In 1974, El Saturn released this album as Outer Spaceways Incorporated (143000A+B) – although it was sometimes entitled A Tonal View of Times Tomorrow, Vol.3. Inexplicably, some of this music also appeared on numerous hybrid pressings of later Saturn albums such as Primitone and Invisible Shield among others. Finally, in 1998, the German DA Music label released a three-CD box set entitled Calling Planet Earth (Freedom 7612), containing some (but not all) the Black Lion holdings, wherein this album is stupidly re-titled Spaceways. I say stupidly because another disc in this otherwise fine box set is inanely titled Outer Spaceways Incorporated, making an already confusing discography needlessly opaque. This is the kind of thing that makes Campbell and Trent’s Earthly Recordings of Sun Ra so absolutely necessary!
https://nuvoid.blogspot.com/2009/07/sun-ra-sunday_12.html

The upshot of all of this is that YET ANOTHER hybrid version of these two recordings has been released as the Bandcamp version of Pictures Of Infinity (added to Spotify playlist). This does not have side 1 of the original Pictures Of Infinity LP, but it does have “The Wind Speaks” and “Outer Space (sic) Incorporated/We Travel The Spaceways” from Spaceways (i.e. about half of THAT album).

Confused yet? Me too! I’m not even gonna try to figure out where the other FIVE tracks on the new Bandcamp version came from. They say 1966, that’s good enough for me. Another lovely little curveball I had to sort out is that two of the “Spaceways” tracks have been retitled on the reissue versions (see below).

Regarding the music, the Bandcamp notes cover it pretty well:

In the mid-1960s, Sun Ra's commercial recordings and performances were reflecting new musical directions, many representing extreme departures from his Chicago (1956–1960) and early New York (1961–1963) approaches to jazz. Such albums as Other Planes of There (1964), The Heliocentric Worlds of Sun Ra (volumes 1 & 2; 1965), The Magic City (1965), Strange Strings (1966), and Atlantis (1967) pushed beyond the conventions of structured, beat-driven jazz to challenging frontiers. To many ears, they were no longer "inside" jazz at all. Rather, they were "outside"—groundbreaking musical forms that transcended categories. In jazz circles, this side of Ra sparked controversy, gaining him many allies, while losing others.

The 1966 recordings in this set, however, are largely "inside," and demonstrate that during this period Ra didn't abandon his jazz roots (in fact, he never did). These titles, many dating from his Chicago and early New York years, represent an updating of Sun Ra's early catalog (with some new titles). The playing is loose, but structured, and Sun Ra's featured soloists get ample opportunities to stretch out. Call it "harder bop.”

So at this point, we are missing the first track on side 1 of the original POI, the 15-minute “Somewhere There,” which is inexplicably greyed out on Spotify in the US. It is, however, on Youtube:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hw1zLHflWp4

The 2nd track on POI side 1, yet another version of “Outer Spaceways Incorporated,” has been added to Spotify since it IS available in the US on one of the digital POI reissues.

The “Spaceways” LP has been reissued in its entirety physically, but not digitally aside from the two tracks on this new POI version. I couldn’t find those dual-titled tracks (“Chromatic Shadows” a.k.a. “Prelude And Shadow-Light World” and “The Satellites Are Spinning” a.k.a. “We Sing This Song”) on Youtube (sigh/wtf/shrug).

Aside from one other (very interesting) entry yet to come, this brings us to the end of 1966. The Arkestra was continuing to play at Slug’s every Monday, building their following. I wanted to excerpt this bit from the Szwed book as it provides some context for the globetrotting that was to come (see also: the bit upthread about the radio DJ in Europe).

“…Tam Fiofori, a Nigerian poet-writer who had come to New York in 1965 by way of London […] was beginning to write about the Arkestra in underground or arts publications […] He had attached himself to the Arkestra, and he could often be seen at work at the typewriter in The Sun Palace or traveling with the band. More than anyone else, Fiofori made Sun Ra known internationally. And he ambitiously drew Sun Ra deeper into the world of avant arts.[…] But Sonny was not about to let Fiofori or anyone else be his interpreter: “For three years (Fiofori) wrote down everything I said, publishing it all over the world, but he didn’t hear any of it.”

ZING!

One more note on this time period, as per Szwed, regarding 1966-67:

“Again a great number of records were released that had been previously recorded: Sun Ra Visits Planet Earth, Rocket Number Nine, We Travel The Spaceways, and When Angels Speak Of Love. And along with them […] Sun Ra’s first solo piano recordings.” (i.e. the previous week’s “Monorails” set)

sleeve, Tuesday, 3 March 2020 15:02 (four years ago) link

I think the version of "Outer Spaceways Incorporated" on Pictures of Infinity was my first exposure to that song, still probably my favorite. Great set.

Οὖτις, Tuesday, 3 March 2020 16:02 (four years ago) link

1966 - The Ankh And The Ark - Sun Ra and Henry Dumas in conversation

The last thing we have from this year. Recorded at Slug’s Saloom in 1966, a 24-minute conversation between the poet/writer Dumas and Sun Ra. Meandering but fascinating. And what the heck is that background music?

Added to Spotify, available on Bandcamp as well along with detailed and fascinating liner notes:

https://sunramusic.bandcamp.com/album/the-ankh-and-the-ark

sleeve, Wednesday, 4 March 2020 14:51 (four years ago) link


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