A really rare slice of work from Sun Ra's 80s output. A live set that reunites the Arkestra with drummer Salah Ragab, one of the group's key supporters in Egypt. These CDs are all previously unreleased recordings, sourced from Salah Ragab's master tapes. It was previously only available for sale by contacting Salah Ragab personally and ordering it through the mail. Very interesting recordings that could originally be purchased directly from Salah Ragab at the email address salahragabjazz@yahoo.com. I don't know if they are still currently available via Ragab's estate.
Following are the only entries in Campbell/Trent The Earthly Recordings of Sun Ra 2nd ed. regarding the Arkestra's 1984 visit to Egypt. Sun Rise in Egypt was not available when 'The Earthly Recordings' was published.
407. [304] Sun Ra Arkestra
(Sun Ra (p, org, syn, voc); Ronnie Brown (tp, flg, tambourine); Marshall Allen (as, cl, fl, ob, kora, EVI); Eloe Omoe (as, bcl, cacl, fl, EVI); John Gilmore (ts, cl, timb, EVI, voc); Danny Ray Thompson (bars, as, fl, bgo, EVI); James Jacson (bsn, fl, ob, Inf-d, EVI, voc); James Glass (eg); Rollo Radford (standup eb); Matthew Brown (cga); Clifford Jarvis (d); Salah Ragab (cga, perc); Myriam Broche (dance); Greg Pratt (dance).
A 110-minute edited audience tape is in circulation. Tunes and personnel from ct, who has reassigned some of the items to January 19/29 since that tape surfaced. Some pieces are incomplete and there are breaks in the recording. The tape in circulation has only 7 minutes of "Watusi" (from the end of a set) but the full 18-minute performance was recorded and was included in 1999 on Golden Years CD GYI, Sun Ra Arkestra Meets Salah Ragab in Egypt. "Pleiades" is the second version of that tune from the 110-minute tape. The blues features Sun Ra calling out, "Is there a trumpet player in this house?" etc., as various Arkestrans take solos.
According to Danny Ray Thompson, this was the Arkestra's third and last trip to Egypt. Like the other two, it was "unannounced" and only the "hard core" of the Arkestra went. Personnel ct and rlc, with help from Thompson. Thanks to Samarai for a program from Il Capo, an Italian restaurant with an adjoining "show-bistro" area called Il Buco.
408. [304a] Sun Ra Arkestra
Sun Ra (p, ep, org, syn, voc); Ronnie Brown (tp, flg, tambourine); Marshall Allen (as, cl, fl, ob, kora, EVI); Eloe Omoe (as, bcl, cacl, fl, EVI); John Gilmore (ts, cl, timb, EVI, voc); Danny Ray Thompson (bars, as, fl, bgo, EVI); James Jacson (bsn, fl, ob, Inf-d, EVI, voc); James Glass (eg); Rollo Radford (standup eb); Matthew Brown (cga); Clifford Jarvis (d); Salah Ragab (cga, perc); Myriam Broche (dance); Greg Pratt (dance).
Following are the only entries in Campbell/Trent The Earthly Recordings of Sun Ra 2nd ed. regarding the Arkestra's 1984 visit to Egypt. Sun Rise in Egypt was not available when 'The Earthly Recordings' was published.
407. [304] Sun Ra Arkestra
(Sun Ra (p, org, syn, voc); Ronnie Brown (tp, flg, tambourine); Marshall Allen (as, cl, fl, ob, kora, EVI); Eloe Omoe (as, bcl, cacl, fl, EVI); John Gilmore (ts, cl, timb, EVI, voc); Danny Ray Thompson (bars, as, fl, bgo, EVI); James Jacson (bsn, fl, ob, Inf-d, EVI, voc); James Glass (eg); Rollo Radford (standup eb); Matthew Brown (cga); Clifford Jarvis (d); Salah Ragab (cga, perc); Myriam Broche (dance); Greg Pratt (dance).
Il Capo/Il Buco, Cairo, Egypt,
January 13, 1984
January 13, 1984
Watusi (Pitts-Sherrill)
fragment:
unidentified blues [SR voc]
an incomplete set [60 min.]:
Pleiades (Ra) [Allen and Thompson, fl]
unidentified title [perc; kora]
unidentified title [perc; tp; Allen, ob; ens]
Discipline 27-II (Ra) [Sr declamation] /
Tomorrow Never Comes (Ra) [SR, ens voc]
Honeysuckle Rose (Waller-Razaf)
Deep Purple (DeRose-Parish)
Street of Dreams (Young-Lewis)
…
unidentified blues (Ra)
Days of Wine and Roses (Mancini)
Happy as the Day Is Long (Arlen-Koehler)
Stardust (Carmichael-Parish)
A 110-minute edited audience tape is in circulation. Tunes and personnel from ct, who has reassigned some of the items to January 19/29 since that tape surfaced. Some pieces are incomplete and there are breaks in the recording. The tape in circulation has only 7 minutes of "Watusi" (from the end of a set) but the full 18-minute performance was recorded and was included in 1999 on Golden Years CD GYI, Sun Ra Arkestra Meets Salah Ragab in Egypt. "Pleiades" is the second version of that tune from the 110-minute tape. The blues features Sun Ra calling out, "Is there a trumpet player in this house?" etc., as various Arkestrans take solos.
According to Danny Ray Thompson, this was the Arkestra's third and last trip to Egypt. Like the other two, it was "unannounced" and only the "hard core" of the Arkestra went. Personnel ct and rlc, with help from Thompson. Thanks to Samarai for a program from Il Capo, an Italian restaurant with an adjoining "show-bistro" area called Il Buco.
408. [304a] Sun Ra Arkestra
Sun Ra (p, ep, org, syn, voc); Ronnie Brown (tp, flg, tambourine); Marshall Allen (as, cl, fl, ob, kora, EVI); Eloe Omoe (as, bcl, cacl, fl, EVI); John Gilmore (ts, cl, timb, EVI, voc); Danny Ray Thompson (bars, as, fl, bgo, EVI); James Jacson (bsn, fl, ob, Inf-d, EVI, voc); James Glass (eg); Rollo Radford (standup eb); Matthew Brown (cga); Clifford Jarvis (d); Salah Ragab (cga, perc); Myriam Broche (dance); Greg Pratt (dance).
Il Capo / Il Buco, Cairo, Egypt,
January 19 and 29, 1984
January 19 and 29, 1984
incomplete set [45 min]:
Pleiades (Ra) [Allen and Thompson, fl duet]
When There Is No Sun (Ra) [SR, ens voc]
unidentified title [Allen, ob]
Discipline 27 (Ra)
I Have Many Names (Ra); /
I'll Wait for You (Ra) [SR, ens voc]
Blue Lou (Sampson)
Day Dream (Strayhorn)
Strange Mathematics, Rhythmic Equations (Ra)
[SR, ens voc]
incomplete set [25 min.]:
untitled improvisation [kora]
untitled improvisation [Ragab, cga; EVIs; d; cond ens]
Discipline 27-II (Ra) /
This World Is Supposed to Be Heaven (Ra) [SR voc]
Bad Truth (Ra) /
I, Pharaoh (Ra) [SR, ens voc]
The Golden Lady (Ra)
…
Interplanetary Music (Ra) [SR, ens voc; inc]
incomplete set opening [10 min.]:
untitled improvisation [Thompson, bars with d, c/a; Allen, picc; Jacson, fl]
Greetings from the 21st Century (Ra) [SR, ens voc]
fragment:
Love in Outer Space (Ra) [inc]
I collected these rips/scans from the 'Contributions' section of the wonderful and amazing
CALL IT ANYTHING
jazz blog.
Many (many) thanks to the original uploader.
Sunrise in Egypt Vol. 1
01. Watusa - The Egyptian March 13:05
02. Solo Organ 2:43
03. Speech (Sun Ra) 2:38
04. Shadow World 8:13
05. Happy As The Day Is Long 3:30
06. Day Dream 4:40
07. Blues House 9:39
08. Take The A Train 5:03
09. West Of The Moon 4:33
01. Watusa - The Egyptian March 13:05
02. Solo Organ 2:43
03. Speech (Sun Ra) 2:38
04. Shadow World 8:13
05. Happy As The Day Is Long 3:30
06. Day Dream 4:40
07. Blues House 9:39
08. Take The A Train 5:03
09. West Of The Moon 4:33
or
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RS
RS
Sunrise in Egypt Vol. 2
01. Opening 15:37
02. Unidentified Standard 4:50
03. Opening 11:52
04. Speech (Sun Ra) 1:29
05. Opening - Love In Outer Space - Nuclear War 18:14
06. Blue Lou 3:00
01. Opening 15:37
02. Unidentified Standard 4:50
03. Opening 11:52
04. Speech (Sun Ra) 1:29
05. Opening - Love In Outer Space - Nuclear War 18:14
06. Blue Lou 3:00
or
-320-
-320-
Sunrise in Egypt Vol. 3
01. Round About Midnight 6:55
02. School You, About Jazz 6:05
03. Opening 10:48
04. Speech (Sun Ra) 1:58
05. Opening 18:00
06. Fate In A Pleasant Mood 17:06
01. Round About Midnight 6:55
02. School You, About Jazz 6:05
03. Opening 10:48
04. Speech (Sun Ra) 1:58
05. Opening 18:00
06. Fate In A Pleasant Mood 17:06
Salah Ragab’s Egyptian Jazz
The stories of music visionaries are very rarely in our culture the product of rigid government directives, but in the case of the rise of Jazz music in Egypt, the greatest pioneer was also a political dignitary who made it part of the national agenda. Salah Ragab was born in Egypt in 1936. By the 1960s, the multi-instrumentalist would be responsible for introducing jazz music to the Afro-Arab world, aligning himself with the compelling currents of American jazz music and to later be revered as the Godfather and pioneer of Egyptian jazz music. Strangely, very little has been written about his upbringing and the factors leading to this very important historical phenomenon.The 1960s was a dynamic decade in the world of artistic innovations and social movements. In the height of bebop, American jazz artists like John Coltrane and Yusef Lateef were increasingly drawn to the world of Islam and the Arab-African nations. This was the time of social unrest in Africa stemming from the mass rejection of European colonization, leading to bloody revolutions everywhere in the global South throughout Africa, Latin America, and Southeast Asia.
Egypt’s second president Gamal Abdel Nasser led Egypt through a victorious revolution in 1952. Nasser was a proponent of cultural nationalism as a means to political independence. His strong stance against European imperialism appealed to marginalized Blacks in the U.S. who looked to social movements abroad to fuel their own fight for gaining civil rights at home. Similarly in Algeria, another North African country in political turmoil, the FLN (National Liberation Front) brought Algeria to independence against its former French colonizers a decade later in 1962.
One of the reasons that Salah Ragab is still little known is due to the fact that the first introduction of Egyptian jazz to American listeners was not until the beginning of the 21st century, about four decades after the initial recordings of Ragab’s original ensemble. Salah Ragab and the Cairo Jazz Band Presents Egyptian Jazz was released on Art Yard in 2006, as one of the largest collections of Ragab’s work made available to the public outside of Egypt. The album carefully blends the usage of traditional North African instruments, including a Ramadan drum, the Baza, a bamboo flute also known as the Nay, with an amazing orchestration of piano, bass, drums, percussions, four trumpets, four trombones, and five saxophones. Though it is clear on the recording that the compositions and arrangements on the album were greatly informed by American jazz, a reverse phenomenon was evident in The States. Indigenous African instrumentation in general was also increasingly heard on American jazz recordings as spiritual jazz and free jazz innovators started diverging from the bop. Sun Ra of course was one of the biggest proponents of this.
Ragab’s most notable collaboration was with Sun Ra, an American keyboardist/synthesizer player/composer/band leader. Hartmut Geerkan invited Sun Ra and his Arkestra to Egypt in 1971 (Read more in Sun Ra in Egypt). They returned twice more in ’83 and ’84. The collaboration between Ra and Ragab are some of the only documented examples of this unique cultural exchange at the time. Ra sought the knowledge of ancient Egypt, as his spiritual identity was tied in with the mysticism surrounding esoteric Egyptian teachings. Ra is therefore imprinted in history as one of the legendary figures responsible for the development of Egyptian jazz. Of the three albums available to the West of Ragab’s discography, Salah Ragab Meets Sun Ra in Egypt was a compilation of music from a studio session at Geerkan’s home and a live recording with Ragab playing with the Arkestra. Another reissue after the 2006 Cairo Jazz Band Presents Egyptian Jazz was A Tribute to Sun Ra/Latino in Cairo that was released in 2007.
(Read the entire article at The Revivalist)




thank YOU!!!
ReplyDeleteI-)
You're welcome, I-) !
ReplyDeleteI was kind of excited to post this but it's not the easiest recording to find info about.
Terrific, thanks for more Ra and/in Egypt
ReplyDelete> it's not the easiest recording to find info
ReplyDelete> about.
no kiddin'! this is probably one of the most obscure known about recordings. a great find, sherlock yotte!
I-)
Digging this big time. Thanks, Mighty Yotte, for resurrecting from CIA.
ReplyDeleteHi Yotte,
ReplyDeleteI am continuing to explore the riches on your marvellous blog. Would there be any chance of these discs being re-upoped at some point? Keep up the good work!
Hi Jerry,
ReplyDeleteI'll have RS links for these up tonight/tomorrow morning. The HF links take me longer to upload so those might take an extra day or two.
Great - very many thanks for this, Yotte. I very much look forward to listening to these discs.
ReplyDeleteHere are the new RS links. HF links in the next day or two!
ReplyDelete-FLAC-
Vol 1
Vol 2
Vol 3
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Vol 1
Vol 2
Vol 3
Here are some HF links
ReplyDelete-FLAC-
HF 1
HF 2
HF 3
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HF 1
HF 2
HF 3