Sun Ra & His Arkestra: The Bottom Line, New York, NY 1977-12-13 (CDR)
It’s unclear
whether Sun Ra remained in Europe after the November 24 Piano Recital in Venice
or returned to the United States before heading back to Italy in January 1978. There
are no entries in The Earthly Recordings regarding the entire month of December
and, in an interview with Keyboard Magazine, Sonny spoke of the solo
performance and the January ‘78 quartet concerts as if they were part of the
same tour (see Campbell & Trent, p.245). In addition, trumpeter Michael Ray
states in his liner notes to the 2007 reissue of Disco 3000 that, following the
week-long run at The Jazz Showcase (which produced the albums, The Soul Vibrations of Man and Taking a Chance on Chances), “[t]he very next phone call from Sun Ra was
from Rome Italy. He asked if I was able to come to Rome to record an album.”
This seems to indicate that Sonny had stayed behind to negotiate the Horo Records
deal and set up last-minute concert dates for the New Year—and without even knowing
who else might be joining him.
But, then, in
the summer of 2008, two previously unheard Arkestra tracks were broadcast by
Sun Ra archivist Michael D. Anderson on the ESP Internet Radio Tribute, both of
which were purportedly recorded at The Bottom Line in New York on December 13,
1977. While I have no real reason to doubt “The Good Doctor” (and it would make
sense, in a way, that Sonny would be back in the states during the holidays),
upon close listening (and considering the information above), I’m not totally convinced that date is correct.
In any
event, the contiguous 16-minute concert sequence is certainly unusual,
beginning with (apparently) the only known performance of “I Cover the
Waterfront,” the 1933 hit song by Johnny Green and Edward Heyman, which was popularized
by Louis Armstrong, Billie Holiday and Ella Fitzgerald. As with other old-timey
numbers in this vein, it is mostly a vehicle for one of John Gilmore’s extended
flights on tenor saxophone, punctuated by harmonized riffing from the rest of
the band and a short organ solo from Ra. Of course, it is always delightful to
hear Gilmore playing in this sort of straight-ahead, post-bop fashion but, honestly,
it’s not one of those jaw-droppingly amazing displays he was routinely capable
of. Instead, it’s merely great: tasteful, inventive and swinging. “Song of the
Stargazers” appears here in a radically re-arranged version, with an odd
major/minor tonality, angular herky-jerky rhythms and lyrics that are
antiphonally chanted by the band rather than sung. Even weirder, Sonny adds some
cryptic declamations towards the end. Interestingly, I don’t hear June Tyson or
any trumpets whatsoever but Vincent Chauncey sounds especially strong on the
French horn and is later joined by someone (possibly Craig Harris) on a warm
and brassy trombone. Frankly, the abject strangeness of this rendition makes me
suspect a different date—but then again, who knows?
Ultimately,
this snippet of tape poses more questions than it answers, particularly when it
comes to nailing down the chronology. Perhaps there is more from this concert
in the El Saturn archive, which might provide some more clues as to its origin.
Regardless, the unusual repertoire and excellent sound quality make it a highly
enjoyable listen. There is a lot of other rare material to be found on the ESP Internet
Radio Tribute and is well worth tracking down—even if the discographical info
is a little sketchy. So it goes with Sun Ra!
I never thanked you for putting me on the ESP Internet Radio Tribute a couple of years back. I ended up sticking it on a 5GB USB drive. Very good for 13+ hours uninterrupted Ra immersion!
ReplyDeleteThe Earthly Recordings Of Sun Ra(2nd Edition) arrived in the mail this week. A great book but slightly disappointed with the physical quality. Several pages were still attached together at the tops as they were not guillotined properly and several pages in the artists index at the rear had badly smudged print. Bought it directly from Cadence as i couldn't find it anywhere else. I was pretty expensive for a paper back but Glad I have it.
ReplyDeleteI found an online Jazz shop last week and they had pretty much all the Transparency releases on CD which I have asked my electrical wholesaler to buy for me using my bonus points for spending so much money with them over the last six months. Also they are getting me a copy of the 28CD set "The Complete Detroit Jazz Center Residency"(I Hope) from Amazon, possibly the last new one available anywhere.
The obsession grows.
I have managed to download the ESP internet Radio Tribute from Yotte's Blog, looking forward to checking it out.
@ Roddus Watch the binding on the Earthly Recordings. I'm careful with my books but mine is now held together with rubber bands and every time I open it - which is quite often - I'm scared it's going to break in two!
ReplyDeleteJean K is correct. The spine on my copy of "The Earthly Recordings" has split and the pages are loose. I hope someday a third edition is published - with a proper sewn binding!
ReplyDeleteI'll chime in on the Earthly Recordings binding...I'm not a t the rubber band stage yet but the spine is totally split at around 1974. But it's well-loved regardless.
ReplyDelete