The
French record label BYG/Actuel was founded in March 1967 by Fernand
Boruso, Jean-Luc Young, and Jean Georgakarakos (a/k/a “Karakos”) as an
outgrowth of Actuel magazine, an underground arts journal active in the
student protest movements of the time. In July, 1969, the Pan-African
Arts Festival attracted a number of American musicians to Algiers and
photographer and hardcore jazz fan, Jacques Bisceglia was enlisted to
attract some of the expatriate Americans to Paris with a promise of
paying work and the opportunity to record. A number of studio recordings
were made that summer by such luminaries as Don Cherry, Archie Shepp,
Anthony Braxton, The Art Ensemble of Chicago, and Dave Burrell. The
label also planned an Actuel Festival to be held in Paris, but the
French government denied them permission given their (tenuous)
connection to the riots of 1968. The festival finally occurred in
October, 1969 in the Belgian town of Amougies and while it was an
economic disaster, the music was excellent and provided further material
for the fledgling label. By 1972, BYG/Actuel had released almost fifty
LPs documenting the cream of American and European free jazz and
experimental musicians, but financial difficulties caused the
partnership to disintegrate into acrimonious litigation and eventual
bankruptcy. The original albums, with their striking graphic design by
Claude Caudron, quickly fell out of print and remain valuable
collector’s items today. Accusations of impropriety have tainted the
label ever since its dissolution and bootlegged editions of certain
titles (including this one) have been widely available over the years,
lending credence to these allegations. Georgakarakos went on to found
Celluloid while Young started Charly, small record labels with their own
reputations for questionable business practices. Nevertheless, in 2002,
Charly commissioned Sonic Youth’s Thurston Moore and journalist Byron
Coley to curate Jazzactuel, a three-CD box set of highlights from the
BYG era and, for a few years thereafter, legitimate (and, later,
not-so-legitimate) reissues of the catalog started appearing on the
market. (Currently, the BYG/Actuel label has been seemingly resurrected
and is re-releasing titles on LP only, but I haven’t heard any of them.)
Ethical issues aside, the music is uniformly wonderful and well worth
seeking out.
Sun Ra himself was unable to personally attend the festivities in Europe, but instead compiled two LPs worth of music for the label entitled Solar Myth Approach Volumes 1 and 2, which were released as BYG/Actuel 529.340 and 629.341 in 1972, toward the end of the label’s existence. Consisting of various recordings made between 1967 and 1970, each volume is carefully sequenced to highlight the most avant-garde, experimental and downright trippy elements of the Arkestra’s music while remaining a satisfyingly coherent pair of albums. “Spectrum” sets the mood, opening Volume 1 with thick, dissonant chords that rise and fall over the ominous heartbeat of Ra’s clavinet. Meanwhile, Gilmore blows tightly controlled overtones on tenor with Patrick asserting angular counter-figures on baritone sax. The drummer-less texture sounds more like contemporary classical music than any kind of “jazz” but the following track, “Realm of Lightening,” features clattering clouds of trash-can percussion and blatting trombones over a hypnotic, repeated bass line. Things briefly settle down with a lovely rendition of “The Satellites Are Spinning,” taken at a lugubrious tempo with June Tyson and Gilmore singing in unison over Ra’s rhapsodic clavinet and some softly supportive hand drums. “Legend” is the centerpiece of the album, an astounding ten-minute excursion for straining trombones and frenzied oboes, with Gilmore and Ra engaged in pitched battle, Sonny attacking the clavinet with an unusually Cecil Taylor-ian aggression. “Seen III, Took 4” is another inventive Minimoog solo from 1970. By de-tuning the oscillators and with a call and response form, Ra simulates polyphony on the monophonic instrument, adding creative volume swells, filter and ring modulator effects, and ending with swooning pitch bends. “They’ll Come Back” is a short but tantalizing composition that calls to mind both Bélá Bartok and Duke Ellington with its interlude of fiercely rumbling piano and ringing, childlike celeste before a dramatic full stop and beautifully rendered coda. Volume 1 closes with “Adventures of Bugs Hunter,” which starts out as a groovily choogling number for Ra’s funky clavinet and Boykin’s rock-solid bass. But then Marshall Allen intercedes with some ear-piercing piccolo, in a deliberately contrary key and rhythm, all of which is swathed in Hunter’s patented echo/reverb effect. Far out, man! A perfect ending to an adventurous LP.
Volume 2 is perhaps even more intense, opening with “The Utter Nots,” another minimalist composition for maximalist Arkestra, consisting of an insistent one-note figure interspersed with blasting space chords... (continue reading at NuVoid's Sun Ra Sundays).
These
two discs from Sun Ra and his Solar Myth Arkestra are not, as their
title suggests, parts of a singular or continuous work. They were
initially issued as two separate titles -- similar to the two-part
Heliocentric Worlds of Sun Ra -- by the Belgian BYG Actuel label in
1971. Both volumes consist of mid-fidelity and primarily self-realized
and -produced recordings. Despite the claim that these sides were taped
in New York City at Sun Studios, Ra discographer Robert L. Campbell
notes that by the time these tracks were documented, the Arkestra had
ended its N.Y.C. residency and returned to Philadelphia. Although this
collection may not be the highest priority for potential converts or the
uninitiated, there is a tremendous spectrum of sounds from Ra and the
Arkestra on these discs. Volume One ranges from the atonal
sparseness of the keyboard solo "Seen III Took 4" to the equally
intimate ensemble work of "Adventures of Bugs Hunter" -- which in true
Ra fashion doesn't even feature the musician. There are also more
percussive works such as "Realm of Lightning" -- whose lead instrument
sounds like newspaper being struck with pencils. This is augmented with a
percussive onslaught featuring several distinct waves of rapid and
emphatic timbale-style solos. The performances on Volume Two
contain a noticeably heavier and more aggressive sound from the
Arkestra. "The Utter Nots" is a classic example of many early-'70s
arrangements, which were becoming almost ridiculously arithmetical. The
extended work features some inspired and nimble fretwork from Ronnie
Boykins (acoustic bass). Also of note are early renderings of "Outer
Spaceways, Inc." and "The Satellites Are Spinning." These vocal tracks
would be reworked and recycled into Ra's groundbreaking film Space Is
the Place. [In 2001, after some years in obscurity, The Solar Myth Approach, Vol 1-2 was issued as a two-CD set for the first time in the domestic U.S.]
AMG Review by Lindsay Planer
Solar-Myth Approach vol. 1
One
of Sun Ra's more experimental sets (and that's saying something),
1970's The Solar-Myth Approach, Vol. 1 is an eclectic set of tapes from
sessions that date back to 1967 and include some of Sun Ra's earliest
experiments with Moog synthesizers (the clatteringly primitive solo
"Scene III, Took 4" sounds like it could have come from the very first
time he experimented with the machine) and evidence of his increasing
interest in dissonance and repetition. For example, the opening
"Spectrum" sets various horn and reed players against each other in such
a fashion that they sound woozily out of tune, even though they're
playing in the same key; like most of the rest of the album, this piece
is built on the most minimal compositional skeleton, with little in the
way of melodic development or counterpoint. The pieces are also recorded
with typically eccentric instrument groupings; most of the ten-minute
"Legend" is an extended duet for trombones, and only the rollicking
"They'll Come Back" has a typical small-combo lineup. Those who are into
Sun Ra's most non-traditional musical ideas should look no further.
AMG Review by Stewart Mason
Solar-Myth Approach vol. 2
Recorded between 1970-1971, The Solar Myth Approach, Vol. 2
is comprised of solo keyboard explorations by Sun Ra, couched in
between two free-form workouts by his whole Arkestra. Kicking off the
set is the first band workout "The Utter Nots," which, amidst a
relentless Afro-percussion backdrop, features a loose mix of fiery and
mild statements by most of Ra's main soloists (alto saxophonist Marshall
Allan, oboe player James Jackson, tenor saxophonist John Gilmore, et
al.). The more frenetic of the two Arkestra features, "Strange Worlds,"
alternates between full band outbursts and cryptic keyboard and vocal
interludes. The high points of the album, though, are Ra's wonderfully
strange excursions at the keys. Evoking a child's outer-space play land,
Ra produces a dizzying whirl of celestial noises on the Moog
synthesizer for "Scene 1, Take 1" while switching the keyboard to
harpsichord mode for a hauntingly beautiful meditation of baroque
proportions on "Pyramids." The final solo finds Ra running amok over
both the piano keyboard and the strings inside, producing a ghostly haze
of sound. Balancing out the momentous proceedings are two brief and
whimsical numbers, "Ancient Ethiopia" and "Outer Spaceways, Inc.," the
last of which includes a pleasant vocal request to join Sun Ra and the
Arkestra on a journey to world beyond, an invitation implied throughout
the disc.
The Solar - Myth Approach Vol. 1 - 2
CD
1. Spectrum 5:02
2. Realm Of Lightning 12:24
3. The Satellites Are Spinning 3:32
4. Legend 9:56
5. Seen III, Took 4 3:29
6. They'll Come Back 3:51
7. Adventures Of Bugs Hunter 6:38
8. The Utter Nots 11:23
9. Outer Spaceways, Inc 1:21
10. Scene 1, Take 1 8:22
11. Pyramids 2:29
12. Interpretation 7:43
13. Ancient Ethiopia 2:49
14. Strange Worlds 8:32
-FLAC-
RS
HF1 + HF2
or
-320-
RS
HF
CD
1. Spectrum 5:02
2. Realm Of Lightning 12:24
3. The Satellites Are Spinning 3:32
4. Legend 9:56
5. Seen III, Took 4 3:29
6. They'll Come Back 3:51
7. Adventures Of Bugs Hunter 6:38
8. The Utter Nots 11:23
9. Outer Spaceways, Inc 1:21
10. Scene 1, Take 1 8:22
11. Pyramids 2:29
12. Interpretation 7:43
13. Ancient Ethiopia 2:49
14. Strange Worlds 8:32
-FLAC-
RS
HF1 + HF2
or
-320-
RS
HF
The Solar - Myth Approach Vol. 1 (LP)
180 gram LP Reissue
1. Spectrum 5:00
2. Realm of Lightning 12:20
3. The Satellites are Spinning 3:30
4. Legend 9:53
5. Seen III, Took 4 3:29
6. They'll Come Back 3:50
7. Adventures of Bugs Hunter 6:35
-FLAC-
RS
HF
or
-320-
RS
MF
The Solar - Myth Approach Vol. 2 (LP)
180 gram LP Reissue
1. A1 The Utter Nots 11:18
2. A2 Outer Spaceways, Inc 1:21
3. A3 Scene 1, Take 1 8:18
4. B1 Pyramids 2:29
5. B2 Interpretation 7:40
6. B3 Ancient Ethiopia 2:49
7. B4 Strange Worlds 8:29
-FLAC-
RS
HF
or
-320-
RS
MF








nice surprise, with the addition of the vol. 2 LP being offered here! thanks, yotte!!!
ReplyDeleteI-)
Thanks, I-). I recently purchased the vol. 2 LP and wanted to share the rip/pics. The more I listen to these, the more I like 'em. Hope you're not the only one to notice the new rip!
ReplyDeleteMerci Yotte. These lp pictures are stunning, what a beauties (the covers notably).
ReplyDeleteI have the 2 cd reissue, I guess it's time to give them a fresh listen !
Take care
Thanks Frédito. 1/2 the reason I bought the LP reissues was for the covers! I now think these are some of Ra's best albums, though it took me some time to appreciate them. I didn't like them much at first but something kept drawing me back to them again and again.
ReplyDelete