Sun Ra & His Arkestra: The Empty Foxhole Café, Philadelphia, PA 4-29-77
(AUD 2CDR)
Taking its name from the 1967 album by Ornette Coleman, The Empty
Foxhole Café was a student-run venue at the University of Pennsylvania, located
in the basement of St. Mary’s Church at 39th & Locust Streets, at the
time a particularly run-down area of Philadelphia. It housed an actual
theater with a large stage, nice acoustics and student volunteers would
serve natural foods between sets—hey, it was the ‘Seventies! Weekends were
mostly reserved for avant-garde artists such as Cecil Taylor, Archie Shepp and
The Art Ensemble of Chicago, who are all known to have performed there. The
Arkestra made an appearance at The Empty Foxhole on April 29, 1977 and a
two-hour audience recording circulates amongst collectors (see Campbell &
Trent, p.234).
As usual with these things, sound quality is problematic, to say the
least. Once again, Sun Ra’s searing electric organ dominates all the other
instruments—but however good (or bad) the original (monophonic) tape might have sounded,
what we have here is many cassette generations removed, with severe wow-and
flutter issues and, most egregiously, a Dolby mismatch or two, resulting in
elevated hiss and distortion that was clearly not present on the original recording.
To make matters worse, this horribly degraded tape was then sloppily transferred
to digital, evidenced by audible clicks and digital distortion present throughout,
getting progressively worse and worse as it goes along. Ouch! That said, there is, as usual,
some great (and not so great) music buried beneath all the noise—you just have
to struggle to hear it.
The set opens with another “Strange Strings”-styled improvisation with
kora, thumb-pianos, log drums and other myriad percussion instruments rattling
away but it’s sadly impossible to make out exactly what’s going on. And it goes
on for quite a while, moving through a variety of rhythmic feels while Vincent
Chancey provides some lugubrious French horn and someone (probably Richard “Radu”
Williams) (Id.) taking a rare bass solo. Just as the crowd becomes audibly
restless, the horns split the sonic universe with a raucous space chord and one
of the Space Ethnic Voices starts singing, “Make Way For the Sunshine.” But then
June Tyson comes in with “(The World Is Waiting) For The Sunrise” and the two
songs are sung at the same time in weird, polytonal counterpoint—very
interesting! After Sonny’s big entrance, Danny Ray Thompson takes up the
bari-sax riff for “Discipline 27” and it’s another hot rendition with an
extended freakout section, Marshall Allen and Danny Davis duking it
out on altos and Craig Harris going his own way on trombone. So far, so good.
Then Sonny moves to the Rocksichord for “How Am I To Know?” but his
stomp-box phase-shifter is shorting out: it crackles, pops and cuts off and on
of its own accord. The Arkestra carries on, though, with Rusty Morgan singing
lead (Id.) and Gilmore taking a splendidly idiomatic solo that gets a nice
round of applause. But Ra is clearly frustrated with the
Rocksichord and abandons it altogether to join in the singing, only to let the
song sort of peter out. Oh well. “Love In Outerspace” is the usual thing: a bit
tedious at over fourteen minutes, but no doubt a delightful visual spectacle. The
next thirty minutes are devoted to the big-band classics, “Lightnin’,” “Yeah
Man!,” “Take The ‘A’-Train,” “Honeysuckle Rose” and “Red Room” and it’s an oddly
uneven performance. John Gilmore displays his stunning virtuosity on the B-flat
clarinet (a/k/a “The Misery Stick”) on “Yeah Man!” and delivers a typically
rousing tenor saxophone solo on Fats Waller’s “Honeysuckle Rose”—yet he seems
bored with “Take The ‘A’-Train” and unusually breathless on “Red Room.” We do
get to hear the laconic Akh Tal Ebah take a rare trumpet solo on “Take The
‘A’-Train” while Ahmed Abdullah, is elsewhere his usual showy self. But by and
large, this is not the Arkestra at its best: the ensembles are ragged and the
band sounds unsure of the arrangements at times. It
doesn’t help matters much that the sound quality is so terrible, no doubt clouding my opinion of the music—your mileage may vary.
Moving on: Allen and Ra duet on an untitled ballad, possibly
through-composed: similar in feel to “Taking a Chance on Chancey” and other
French horn duets we’ve heard, Sonny is outlining definite harmonies while
Allen freely extrapolates on alto saxophone—whatever it is, it’s just lovely. “King
Porter Stomp” brings us back to the Swing Era and Gilmore sounds more inspired
here, taking a small motivic figure introduced by Harris’s trombone solo and
running with it. “The Mayan Temples” settles into a gentle, spacey groove with
flutes on top and Ra taking a pleasantly ruminative electronic solo—but the
recording is marred by numerous technical difficulties, including an
inconvenient tape flip and a faulty microphone cable. And so it goes…”Outer
Spaceways Incorporated” is resurrected and reimagined as a weirdly asymmetric,
mid-tempo swinger with a complexly hocketed vocal arrangement and Sonny
pontificating amidst an increasingly enervating din. Whoah! I’m not sure if we’ve
heard this arrangement before (or if we’ll hear it again), but it is an
unusually refreshing take on this sometimes overdone singalong.
Finally, we get “The Shadow World,” which is always welcome. And, as
usual, it’s a barn-burner: fast and tight with frenzied horns and pummeling
percussion. Ra takes one of his patented “mad scientist” organ solos where he
sounds like he has three hands, summoning up an astonishing variety of otherworldly
textures, from percussive, high-pitched tinkling to swooning portamentos to
roaring whirlwinds of low-register noise—all at the same time. This is Ra at
his most outrageous
— yet he is firmly in control of every nuance possible from
his crude electronic keyboards. A string of horn solos follows, both
accompanied and a cappella, with James Jacson delivering another lengthy and
impressive display instrumental facility on the difficult and unwieldy
bassoon—but then Harris destroys the mood with an overly cute, bluesy pastiche on
trombone. He manages to elicit some bemused chuckles from the audience but our
recordist is clearly not impressed; running short on tape, he shuts off the
machine until mid-way through Gilmore’s solo. Although Gilmore sounds great,
the effect is ruined and—to add insult to injury—horrific digital distortion starts
to creep in, completely overwhelming everything by the return of the head. Ugh.
The tape mercifully ends there.
So, here we have another crummy “bootleg” with enough tidbits of interesting
music to be worthwhile only to the most fanatical Sun Ra collector. One wishes
the original master tape would resurface and be given a fresh transfer as it
would sound a lot better than this inferior facsimile. Given what we
currently have, most listeners will find the sound quality utterly repellent
and should not even bother hunting it down
— the rest of you know who you are.
Getting caught up here...
ReplyDeleteOkay, yeah, I'm one of the ones who know who I am! I really like this show. The "Honeysuckle Rose" Gilmore solo is great, as you say...but "unusually breathless" on "Rose Room"? I don't hear that. Overall, yeah, it's a rough recording, but in for a penny, in for a pound. And the "Discipline 27" improv is outstanding. The performances at this stage haven't gotten quite as formulaic as they will in the mid- to late-80s; there's still enough variation and spice here (such as the "Outer Spaceways" arrangement) to keep things hopping. Thanks for another great write-up!
This post brought back my own memories of Sun Ra at The Empty Foxhole, but this was back in either late 1970 or early 1971 -- wintertime, for sure, as there was precious little heat in the venue. And there was no "large stage", just a tiny one in a tiny room. The acoustics were about the same as someone's living room. And Ra's organ was deafening! The whole experience was overwhelming to me and my friend -- we were both green suburban teenagers getting our ears cleaned out. I have equally vivid memories of hearing the Sam Rivers Trio, Charles Mingus, and McCoy Tyner in that space. (The Tyner gig was in the summer, and it must have been 100 degrees in the club! A wonderful place, the Foxhole...
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