Sun Ra: The Soul Vibrations of Man (Saturn LP)
If Unity presents the more approachable, trad-jazz side of Sun Ra and
his Arkestra, the next item in the discography shows they were still capable of
getting mighty strange during this period. Live recordings from the Jazz
Showcase in Chicago in November 1977 were edited down and quickly released as
Saturn LP 771, portentously titled The Soul Vibrations of Man (see Campbell
& Trent pp.243-244). While original copies are extremely rare, it was reissued a couple of years ago on 180-gram vinyl by El Saturn Research, which is now, apparently, a
part of Universal Music. It’s one of those weird and wonderful Saturn LPs, with
a cryptically symbolic cover and a metaphysical disquisition on the back, presumably by Ra,
regarding numerology, astrology and “The Dead Past.” In keeping with all that, no
titles are given for the five tracks, instead, Side A is titled, The Soul
Vibrations of Man Part I Volume VII” and Side B, “The Soul Vibrations of Man
Part II Volume VII”. Okeydokey! Thanks to Prof. Campbell, Christopher Trent and Ahmed
Abdullah, the individual tracks have been identified (Id.)—and it is an unusual
set to say the least.
Side A opens with “Sometimes the Universe Speaks,” in its first known
performance. Two flutes (Marshall Allen and Danny Davis)
play a long, slow, folk-like melody, sometimes in unison and sometimes
harmonized but mostly a cappella. After a couple of minutes, the melodies get
freer while still coming together on pre-determined chords as the pitter-patter
of percussion builds up underneath. Eventually, the melody ends and the drums
take over, eliciting cheers from the audience. Suddenly, Ra interrupts with a
homily: “Sometimes the universe speaks/And all is silence/Haven’t you heard how
loud the silence has become lately?” This might have gone on for a while longer, but instead it quickly fades out. More unaccompanied flutes (possibly three or four) lead
the way on the pretty “Pleiades.” According to Prof. Campbell, Danny Ray
Thompson, Eloe Omoe and James Jacson all doubled on flute, so it’s possible they
are all playing on these tracks. The side ends with “Third Heaven/When There
is No Sun,” picking up in mid-sermon, Ra preaching about how “Uranus is the
Seventh Heaven,” while the boys in the band echo his every word. Joking aside,
this is actually one of the more enjoyable space chants to listen to, with less
shouting and a more musical presentation. After a few minutes, Sonny moves to
the organ and fingers some chords to introduce “When There is No Sun,” which
June Tyson and the guys sing in splendid harmony.
“Halloween in Harlem” opens Side B, a lumbering march that lurches
rather than swings, its dissonant harmonies and strained, wide-interval
melodies giving off a campy, horror movie air. Michael Ray takes the first
solo, his trumpet blatty and smeared, with Sonny following up with a brief organ solo
before the return of the theme. Next is an untitled improvisation, with Ra’s
organ outlining a ballad form while Ray solos. As the rhythm section quietly
joins in, it almost sounds like Ra is playing definite chord changes—is this
really an improvisation? Who knows? In some ways, this reminds me of “Taking a
Chance on Chancey,” the improvised duet Ra would often play with Vincent
Chancey on French horn. Of course, Ray is a very different player—brash and
forceful—and he indulges a bit in his trademark echo-echo effect at the close,
which gets the desired rise out of the audience. After a blaring space chord,
the band launches right into “The Shadow World” and here’s where things get
heavy. A series of outrageously intense, high-energy solos follow, with Allen and Davis on
alto sax, Eloe Omoe on bass clarinet and, finally, John Gilmore, who shows them how it’s supposed to be done. An incredible display of multiphonic
split-tones, altissimo squeals and other impossibly extended techniques; yes,
it’s another amazing Gilmore solo! Then Sonny follows up with some wild,
mad-scientist keyboards before the side abruptly ends.
Admittedly, the homemade sound quality is not that great, the edits are
crude and the pressing is less than perfect—but The Soul Vibrations of Man is
still a classic Sun Ra LP. The whole thing, from the crazy cover to the music
contained in the grooves, has a deep, mystical vibe which neatly encapsulates
Ra’s “mythic equations.” I say get it while you can.
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