Friday, November 22, 2013

2nd Chance: Sun Ra - Solo Piano Volume 1 (1977)


Just as his reputation on he synthesizer was growing, Sun Ra began to play more piano again, and in a style that reached back further in jazz tradition than most would have suspected.  But those who had known him for years understood that his origins were in the blues, and assumed that side of his playing: "Sun Ra could play the blues for twenty four hours without repeating a phrase," they claimed.  Though many recognized him as capable of playing bombastically, and of using the piano for color, few thought of him as a major player.  But Paul Bley, one of the two or three leading pianists of free jazz, believed that Sonny was a great piano player, so great that he didn't need a band.  If anything, he felt, the band was a cover for his insecurity.  Early in 1977 Bley convinced Sonny to do a series of piano duo performances with him in New York and Europe and to record for Bley's new audio and video company, Improvising Artists.  In Europe Bley was surprised to see that once he was alone on stage, "Sonny was a ham who liked to clown and surprise the audience -- as at Lake Como, where he shocked them by playing a cake walk!"  On May 20 Sun Ra went into the studio to record Solo Piano, and played a mixture of his own compositions and some unusually conceived standards, such as a very freely played "Sometimes I Feel Like A Motherless Child," or "Yesterdays" done in a brisk stride.  On July 3 he was recorded solo (St. Louis Blues) while playing at Axis-in-Soho as part of the Newport Jazz Festival, and again there were surprises: his "St. Louis Blues" aluded to Earl Hines's famous boogie-woogie version and a cheerful little love song like "Three Little Words" got turned into a melodrama.  But there were modest experiments in keyboard resources as well, such as "Sky and Sun," which stayed almost entirely within a small range at the top of the keyboard.
from Szwed - Space Is The Place p. 342-343




Without his Intergalactic Space Research Arkestra to hide behind, Sun Ra recorded Solo Piano, Vol. 1, revealing a tender, gentle side always lingering but never entirely present in his days leading his large ensemble. Cutting a pair of standards -- the traditional "Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child" and Duke Ellington's "Yesterday" -- and filling the rest of the disc out with original compositions, Ra extemporizes with a surprising mix of restraint and abandon, often sounding as if he is going to play it straight before launching into a key thrashing salvo that would ordinarily be accompanied by a burst of horns. Here, though, with the use of pedaling, Ra lets the notes drift off to space by themselves, lonely and floating in the void. Unfortunately, the production is far below par and Ra's piano sounds flat and lifeless throughout. [I guess Jesse and I will have to agree to disagree on this last point -yotte].
AMG Review  by Jesse Jarnow


 247. [203]  Sun Ra

Solo Piano Volume 1

Sun Ra (p.).
Generation Sound Studio, NYC,
May 20, 1977

Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child (trade.)
Cosmo Rhythmatic (Ra)
Yesterdays (Kern-Harbach)
Romance of Two Planets (Ra)
Irregular Galaxy (Ra)
To a Friend (Ra)

Released in 1977 on Improvising Artists Inc. 37.38.50, Solo Piano Volume 1.  Another LP release was Japanese IAI RJ-7419.  All tracks reissued in 1992 on Improvising Artists Inc. 123850 [CD].  A video on IAI V003 was previously thought to have come from this concert, but in fact is from Sun Ra's second solo session for Improvising Artists.
from Campbell / Trent  The Earthly Recordings 2nd ed.

 
Sun Ra - Solo Piano vol. 1
Generation Sound Studio, NYC, May 20, 1977
 
1. Sometimes I feel like a motherless child    7:30
2. Cosmo rhythmatic    7:15
3. Yesterdays    4:14
4. Romance of two planets    5:14
5. Irregular galaxy    5:18
6. To a friend  7:39

-FLAC-
RS
Mega
FF
or
-320-
RS
Mega
FF

Thanks to Paul W. for his CD rip of this fine album.



Sun Ra
Solo Piano volume 1
IAI 37.38.50 (1977) (LP)


1. A1 Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child   7:29
2. A2 Cosmo Rhythmatic   7:13
3. A3 Yesterdays   4:17
4. B1 Romance of Two Planets   5:16
5. B2 Irregular Galaxy   5:19
6. B3 To a Friend   7:40


-FLAC-

or

-320-


9 comments:

  1. Hey Yotte ..... this is great ...THANK you ... I'm new to this blog and HOLY MOLY i can't get enough ..... I almost don't believe the depth of Sun Ra stuff that show up here ......
    THANK YOU .....

    please send me an email if I can donate to the site or something

    ReplyDelete
  2. Still a revelation after all these years. I’m with Mr. Arnold. It’s not practical for me to buy you a beer (on in this case, a couple of truckloads!) but I would like to do something to support and say thanks for all your time and effort with EQ. It’s without a doubt the best Ra site I know of.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Yotte, another winner! Many thanks from Tejas

    ReplyDelete
  4. Yotte:
    Many thanks, as always!

    Best

    Jim

    ReplyDelete
  5. Thank YOU guys!

    Mr. A, I'm glad you're enjoying it here. Such a kind offer but the only donations I'm prepared to accept are comments, critiques, gifts of links to uploaded Sun Ra related music (that's what Solar Flares was intended to be).

    This place is about about sharing and turning the world on to Ra's music, poetry, and philosophy.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Well Yotte .............many many thanks for your work here....this music is special in a way only listening can define!

    thank you

    ReplyDelete
  7. thanks, yotte! this is a good one to second.

    I-)

    ReplyDelete
  8. yay!! FF links!

    SO many thanks, so little cosmos to send them too! errr...I think that makes sense...gratitude and love to all involved

    satyagraha,
    mmk

    ReplyDelete