Showing posts with label Arkestra. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Arkestra. Show all posts

Sunday, May 10, 2026

Happy 80th Birthday Ahmed Abdullah, jazz trumpeter & educator

Recently, trumpeter Ahmed Abdullah spoke about his book A Strange Celestial Road focusing on his time playing with Sun Ra. 

Here's the scoop...

In this captivating memoir A Strange Celestial Road – the first full-length account of life in the Arkestra by any of its members – Harlem-born trumpeter Ahmed Abdullah recounts two decades of traveling the spaceways with the inimitable composer, pianist, and big-band leader Sun Ra. Gigging everywhere from the legendary Bed-Stuy venue the East to the National Stadium in Lagos, Abdullah paints a vivid picture of the rise of loft jazz and the influence of Pan-Africanism on creative music, while capturing radical artistic and political developments across Brooklyn and Lower Manhattan in the 1970s and ’80s. Richly illustrated with more than fifty pages of photographs and posters from Adger Cowans, Marilyn Nance, Val Wilmer, and others, A Strange Celestial Road interweaves the author’s own moving story—his battles with addiction, spiritual development, and life as a working class performer—with enthralling tales of tutelage under Cal Massey, collaborations with the likes of Ed Blackwell, Marion Brown, and Andrew Cyrille, and profound, occasionally confounding, mentorship by Sun Ra. Originally written in the 1990s with the help of Nuyorican poet Louis Reyes Rivera and published now for the first time, with a foreword by Salim Washington, A Strange Celestial Road is not only an autobiography, but a history of a remarkable and under-documented movement in music. 

Listen to Ahmed Abdullah's interview with David Mittleman interspersed with some relevant performances on WFMU-FM right here. Also, watch a clip of the One Breath Rising book launch for A Strange Celestial Road followed by Ahmed's discussions of Sun Ra and performance clips. 

Get a copy of Ahmed Abdullah's memoir A Strange Celestial Road directly from the publisher Blank Forms right here.  

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Ahmed Abdullah joined the Sun Ra Arkestra as a trumpeter in 1974 and remained a member for more than twenty years. Born in Harlem in 1947, he became an important figure in the New York loft jazz movement, forming the group Abdullah in 1972, and going on to found the Melodic Art-Tet with Charles Brackeen, Ronnie Boykins, and Roger Blank in the early 1970s and The Group with Marion Brown, Billy Bang, Sirone, Fred Hopkins and Andrew Cyrille in 1986. Abdullah is a co-founder of the Central Brooklyn Jazz Consortium, has been the music director of Dianne McIntyre’s Sounds in Motion Dance Company, and is currently music director at the historic venue Sistas’ Place in Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn. He has been a music instructor at Carnegie Hall and Brooklyn Philharmonic Orchestra, and teaches at the New School for Social Research in Manhattan and an elementary school in central Brooklyn.

Louis Reyes Rivera (1945–2012) was a Puerto Rican poet from Brooklyn. Known as the “Dean of Nuyorican Poetics,” he led creative writing workshops in community centers and prisons across New York, lectured on Latin and Black diasporic history and literature at New York colleges including Hunter, Boricua, Pratt, and Stony Brook; and was a leader in the 1969 student movement at CUNY, leading to the founding of its department of ethnic studies. Rivera was also a prolific editor, working on books such as John Oliver Killens’s Great Black Russian: The Life and Times of Alexander Pushkin, and a translator of works by Puerto Rican poets Clemente Soto Velez and Otto Rene Castillo. His own poetry collections include Who Pays the Cost (1977), This One for You (1983), and Scattered Scripture (1996), which received an award from the Latin American Writers Institute.

 









Thursday, May 22, 2025

Remembering Sun Ra on the anniversary of his earthly arrival

Celebrating the life and music of forward looking artist Sun Ra with a 1988 performance and a few documentaries worth checking. 





LINKS


Wednesday, October 9, 2024

Arkestra great Marshall Allen readies long overdue debut album, New Dawn

The first song from Marshall Allen's debut album is the EVI wind-synth enhanced "African Sunset". 

Here's the scoop...

"African Sunset" is the first single off Marshall Allen's upcoming album New Dawn. Allen has been a member of the Sun Ra Arkestra since 1958 and he will release his debut album as a solo artist at the age of 100 on November 29th. You can hear "African Sunset" and get a digital copy via Bandcamp right here

"African Sunset is a tender Afro-Latin ballad with swaying strings and Allen’s EVI wind synthesizer adding some trippy, near-psychedelic tones. It’s the kind of elegant, Afrodiasporic space music that Sun Ra was pioneering back in the 1950s, and the master’s greatest student is still exploring further down that path." – John Morrison, The Wire

Watch Marshall Allen demonstrating his wind synth technique below. 


Saturday, September 28, 2024

Remembering saxophone great John Gilmore on his birthday

Thinking of Sun Ra's longtime sideman John Gilmore with a 1980 interview and a couple of performances worth checking. 






Friday, July 26, 2024

One For The Weekend: Lacy Gibson & The Arkestra

Here's Lacy Gibson performing "I'm Gonna Unmask The Batman" backed by members of Sun Ra's Arkestra. 


Saturday, May 25, 2024

Happy 100th Birthday Arkestra saxophonist Marshall Allen!

Cheers to Marshall Allen on his 100th birthday! Here are a few interviews and some Arkestra performances worth checking. 








LINKS




Monday, February 19, 2024

Previously unissued Sun Ra Arkestra Live in Chicago 1976-77 due for RSD

Zev Feldman's Jazz Detective label is releasing the limited-run Sun Ra At The Showcase 2LP set on April 20th. 


Here's the scoop...

Sun Ra At The Showcase: Live In Chicago 1976-1977 contains previously unreleased live recordings of the legendary intergalactic composer/pianist Sun Ra captured live at Joe Segal's Jazz Showcase in Chicago. This is an official release on producer Zev Feldman's Jazz Detective record label, in partnership with Elemental Music, and in cooperation with the Sun Ra Trust. Researched and compiled by longtime Sun Ra archivist Michael D. Anderson, and transferred from the original tape reels, this limited-edition 180-gram 2-LP set includes an extensive insert with rare photographs; liner notes by GRAMMY-winning author and historian Ashley Kahn; and interviews and statements from a who's who of music icons. Vinyl pressing of 3,000 copies available on Record Store Day, April 20, 2024. Check out the Jazz Detective site for the 2CD version and more info. 



Sun Ra At The Showcase: Live in Chicago 1976-77

SIDE A:

1. A NEW BEGINNING

2. VIEW FROM THE OTHER DIMENSION

3. VISITOR'S APPROACH

4. ANHK NATION (aka ANHKNATON)

SIDE B:

5. MOONSHIP JOURNEY

6. CALLING PLANET EARTH

7. VELVET

SIDE C:

8. HALLOWEEN IN HARLEM

9. KING PORTER STOMP

10. COCKTAILS FOR TWO

11. TAKE THE "A" TRAIN

SIDE D:

12. STOMPIN' AT THE SAVOY

SIDE E:

13. OUTER SPACEWAYS INCORPORATED

14. ENLIGHTENMENT

SIDE F:

15. MEDLEY: A MEMBER OF THE ANGEL RACE (aka SOMEWHERE THERE)

16. END OF CONCERT / JOE SEGAL ANNOUNCEMENT

Friday, November 3, 2023

Phil Alvin's 1986 album Un "Sung Stories" gets reissued by Liberation Hall

The Blasters' frontman Phil Alvin was joined by Sun Ra's Arkestra & Dirty Dozen Brass Band for his widely slept on solo album.


Here's the scoop...

The former Blasters frontman‘s 1986 solo debut album is a soulful collection of blues, jazz, country, and pop songs originally written and recorded between 1925-1953. More than just an engaging document of pre-rock Americana, the album features avant-garde legend Sun Ra and his Arkestra, the Dirty Dozen Brass Band, and New Orleans saxman Lee Allen, whose session work with Little Richard and Fats Domino have earned him near-mythic status. 

Before there was any acknowledgement of what’s now known as the Great American Songbook, a genre called Americana, Triple-A radio, or even an internet to aid in research, a dedicated band of crate-diggers sprang up around LA, discovering long-lost gems on 78s and 45s: Barret “Dr. Demento” Hansen, with his novelty records; Lux Interior of the Cramps, foraging for country and rockabilly; Billy Vera, amassing an R&B archive… and perhaps the most eclectic of the lot, Phil Alvin. 

As renowned music journalist Chris Morris observed in the liner notes, “If you made a trip to the Alvins’ family home in Downey, affectionately known as ‘the Flop,’ in the early ‘80s, it was almost inevitable that Phil would reach into a crate of 78s and pull out some gem you had never heard.” That pioneering eclecticism was admired by critics and fans alike, although Alvin was perhaps just a step or two ahead of the general audience, which is why this album was a cult favorite and not a platinum smash. If anything, it has a better chance at reaching a broad fan base now than it did when it was new. Today, this brilliantly sung, stirringly performed, and deeply felt record is ready for a new embrace by contemporary listeners, who should be ready to catch up to its prophetic sound. 

Writes Chris Morris: "Phil Alvin's "Un 'Sung Stories'" was released, sort of, in 1986 as Slash Records 25481-1. The story of its making and unmaking will be found in my forthcoming Punk Hostage Press book. It is being released on CD today by Liberation Hall with new liner notes by yours truly. (It will reappear on LP, for the first time in 37 years, in December, with the same notes.) As I've said before, it's one of my favorite records; Phil sings the vintage blues, R&B, country, gospel, and pop here brilliantly, with ace support from the Sun Ra Arkestra and the Dirty Dozen Brass Band. If you know it, I hope you will buy it again; if you don't know it, it's a must for your collection."

Grab a copy of the CD or pre-order the vinyl version due in December via Bandcamp right here. Listen to a few tracks from Un "Sung Stories" below. 

This release comes on the heels of Liberation Hall’s Mandatory: The Best of the Blasters, a definitive 20-song collection of the band’s hits and deep cuts. Liberation Hall plans further releases throughout 2024 in celebration of the Blasters’ 45th anniversary. Get a copy of The Blasters' Mandatory compilation right here







Those who'd like to help Phil with his medical costs can contribute to Sweet Relief's Phil Alvin Fund right here


Thursday, September 28, 2023

Happy Birthday John Gilmore!

Remembering saxophone great John Gilmore on his birthday with a couple of his performances with Sun Ra's Arkestra.





Monday, November 21, 2022

R.I.P. Danny Kalb of The Blues Project, 1942-2022

Remembering guitarist Danny Kalb who joined Sun Ra's Arkestra members for Tifton's crazy cool Batman cash-in from 1966.



Here's the scoop on The Sensational Guitars of Dan & Dale LP:
This is not a Sun Ra album, nor does it sound like a Sun Ra album—but Sun Ra and various members of his Arkestra are on it. This 1966 budget-label project was an attempt by producer Tom Wilson (1931–1978) to cash in on the Batman craze launched by the popular superhero comic book-turned-campy TV series. 

"The Sensational Guitars of Dan and Dale" were not a real group—it was a marquee name for a rotating cast of session pros earning rent money by playing on hastily recorded albums intended to turn quick bucks on various musical and cultural fashions. There are at least 20 "Dan & Dale" albums listed at Discogs, most issued on the Diplomat label. To the best of anyone's knowledge, there were no musicians named Dan or Dale involved. In fact, few, if any, musicians have been identified from any D&D projects—"Batman" being a notable exception, and for good reason. 

Wilson had produced Sun Ra's first LP, Jazz by Sun Ra, in 1957 for Wilson's short-lived (but legendary) Cambridge-based Transition label. After Ra relocated from Chicago to New York in 1961, Wilson contacted Sunny, booked him in a Newark NJ studio, and produced The Futuristic Sounds of Sun Ra, issued in 1962 on Savoy. 

The Batman project occurred after Wilson's resignation from a staff producer position at Columbia Records, where he helmed albums by Bob Dylan, Simon & Garfunkel, Eddie Harris, Herbie Mann, and others. By 1966, Wilson had begun selling his services to the highest bidder as a freelancer, and produced many historic projects for MGM-Verve, including the first two albums by the Mothers of Invention, the first two Velvet Underground releases, and albums by Nico, Hugh Masekela, Eric Burdon and the Animals, and others. (More info: www.ProducerTomWilson.com

Despite the Batman album's notoriety among Ra collectors and cognoscenti, Sun Ra was not originally slated to play on it. His involvement was purely circumstantial. 

Wilson had invited members of The Blues Project to play on the session. According to the band's keyboardist, Al Kooper, the group wasn't told in advance about the "Batman" theme—they were just hired to show up, play, and get paid. Blues Project guitarists Danny Kalb and Steve Katz, bassist Andy Kulberg, and drummer Roy Blumenfeld turned up. But Kooper declined. The gig coincided with his father's 50th birthday party, which Kooper didn't want to miss. So Wilson had to find an organist to replace Kooper. 

Sun Ra was Al Kooper's replacement. Sunny brought along Arkestra saxophonists John Gilmore and Pat Patrick, and several other session pros also appeared on the date. 

Kooper has long been listed as having performed on this album. But he ain't on it. I interviewed him several times in 2017 and he was insistent about this. Furthermore, Kooper says he never met Sun Ra. 

As for the music, it's fun, but hardly groundbreaking. The Earthly Recordings of Sun Ra, by Robert L. Campbell and Christopher Trent, offers this critical assessment: "Except for the Batman theme, nearly all of the music on this album was plundered from various sources. 'Batman’s Batmorang' uses the slow movement of Tchaikovsky’s Fifth Symphony; 'Penguin’s Umbrella' takes over Chopin’s A-flat Polonaise; 'Batman and Robin Swing' is based on the love theme from Tchaikovsky’s Romeo and Juliet; and 'Batmobile Wheels' makes do with Bach’s Minuet in G, already recycled as ['A Lover's Concerto'] by the Toys. 'The Riddler’s Retreat' lifts its guitar licks from 'She Loves You' by the Beatles." 

This album has been bootlegged countless times over the decades. As long as we're cataloging Sun Ra's discography on Bandcamp, we figured we'd offer a Batman bootleg too. We claim no rights in the recordings or the compositions. In Sun Ra's monumental catalog, the Batman album is a mere footnote. 

— Irwin Chusid 

Get a digital copy of the album via Bandcamp right here. Listen to a few tracks following the album credits below. 

Credits:
Jimmy Owens: trumpet 
Tom McIntosh: trombone 
John Gilmore: tenor sax 
Pat Patrick: baritone sax 
Sun Ra: Hammond B-3 organ 
Danny Kalb: lead guitar, harmonica 
Steve Katz: rhythm guitar 
Andy Kulberg: bass 
Roy Blumenfeld: drums 
unidentified female vocalists and possibly other musicians as well. 
Produced by Tom Wilson 
 



Saturday, March 5, 2022

Alternate themes for Batman: Lacy Gibson

Lacy Gibson's funky "I'm Gonna Unmask The Batman" w/ Sun Ra's Arkestra should've been used in the new Matt Reeves flick.  


Wednesday, June 24, 2020

Sun Ra Arkestra tease new album with Chad VanGaalen animated clip

Watch Chad VanGaalen's video for "Seductive Fantasy" off the Sun Ra Arkestra's forthcoming album for the UK's Strut label. 


Friday, November 23, 2018

Happy Birthday Pat Patrick

Remembering saxophone great Laurdine "Pat" Patrick with an early Sun Ra collabo and "Sabia" off his Sound Advice album from 1977. 



Friday, September 28, 2018

Happy Birthday John Gilmore

Remembering legendary Arkestra saxophonist John Gilmore on his day with a couple of stellar performances. 



Sunday, January 28, 2018

Watch Yo La Tengo jam with Sun Ra's Arkestra

Yo La Tengo's new album There's A Riot Going On is out March 16. Watch the clip of "Sudden Organ" below.

Monday, May 22, 2017

Happy Birthday Sun Ra!

Here's a clip of Sun Ra's Arkestra performing on French television in 1969. 

Thursday, May 22, 2014

Happy 100th Birthday Sun Ra!








LINKS
NPR: Saturn Still Swings – Celebrating Sun Ra at 100
The Quietus: Yearning For Possible Escape – Sun Ra, Afro-Futurist Godfather

Tuesday, May 22, 2012