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Sun Ra – Singles- The Definitive 45 Collection 1952-1991
1.01 Sun Ra I Am An Instrument
1.02 Sun Ra I Am Strange
1.03 The Nu Sounds with Sun Ra Chicago USA
1.04 The Nu Sounds with Sun Ra Spaceship Lullaby
1.05 The Cosmic Rays with Sun Ra & Arkestra Daddy’s Gonna Tell You No Lie
1.06 The Nu Sounds with Sun Ra & Arkestra A Foggy Day
1.07 Billie Hawkins with Sun Ra & His Orchestra I’m Coming Home
1.08 Billie Hawkins with Sun Ra & His Orchestra Last Call For Love
1.09 Sun Ra & His Arkistra Soft Talk
1.10 Sun Ra & His Arkistra Super Blonde
1.11 Le Sun Ra & His Arkistra Saturn
1.12 Le Sun Ra & His Arkistra Call For All Demons
1.13 Le Sun Ra & His Arkistra Demon’s Lallaby
1.14 Le Sun Ra & His Arkistra Super Sonic Jazz
1.15 Le Sun Ra & His Arkistra Medicine For A Nightmare
1.16 Le Sun Ra & His Arkistra Urnack
1.17 The Qualities Happy New Year To You!
1.18 The Qualities It’s Christmas Time
1.19 Yochanan (The Space Age Vocalist) M Uck M Uck (Matt Matt)
1.20 Yochanan (The Space Age Vocalist) Hot Skillet Momma
1.21 The Cosmic Rays with Le Sun Ra & Arkestra Bye Bye
1.22 The Cosmic Rays with Le Sun Ra & Arkestra Somebody’s In Love
1.23 Le Sun Ra & His Arkestra Hours After
1.24 Le Sun Ra & His Arkestra Great Balls Of Fire
2.01 Sun Ra & His Astro Infinity Arkestra October
2.02 Sun Ra & His Astro Infinity Arkestra Adventur In Space
2.03 The Cosmic Rays with Sun Ra & Arkestra Dreaming
2.04 The Cosmic Rays with Sun Ra & Arkestra Daddy’s Gonna Tell You No Lie
2.05 Hattie Randolph with Sun Ra & His Astro Infinity Arkestra Round Midnight
2.06 Hattie Randolph with Sun Ra & His Astro Infinity Arkestra Back In Your Own Back Yard
2.07 Le Sun Ra & His Arkestra Saturn
2.08 Le Sun Ra & His Arkestra Velvet
2.09 Yochanan ‘A Space Age Vocalist’ with Sun Ra & His Arkestra The Sun One
2.10 Yochanan ‘A Space Age Vocalist’ with Sun Ra & His Arkestra Message To Earthman
2.11 Yochanan with Sun Ra & His Arkestra The Sun Man Speaks
2.12 Sun Ra & His Arkestra Space Loneliness
2.13 Sun Ra & His Arkestra State Street
2.14 Sun Ra & His Arkestra The Blue Set
2.15 Sun Ra & His Arkestra Big City Blues
2.16 Sun Ra & His Arkestra featuring Pat Patrick A Blue One
2.17 Sun Ra & His Arkestra featuring Pat Patrick Orbitration In Blue
2.18 Sun Ra & His Arkestra Hell #1 (a.k.a. Out There A Minute)
2.19 Little Mack with Sun Ra & His Arkestra Tell Her To Come On Home
2.20 Little Mack with Sun Ra & His Arkestra I’m Making Believe
3.01 Sun Ra & His Outer Space Arkestra The Bridge
3.02 Sun Ra & His Outer Space Arkestra Rocket #9
3.03 Sun Ra & His Astro Solar Infinity Arkestra Blues On Planet Mars
3.04 Sun Ra & His Astro Solar Infinity Arkestra Saturn Moon
3.05 Sun Ra & His Astro Intergalactic Infinity Arkestra Journey To Saturn
3.06 Sun Ra & His Astro Intergalactic Infinity Arkestra Enlightenment
3.07 Sun Ra & His Astro Intergalactic Infinity Arkestra I’m Gonna Unmask The Batman
3.08 Sun Ra & His Astro Intergalactic Infinity Arkestra The Perfect Man
3.09 Sun Ra & His Arkestra Love In Outer Space
3.10 Sun Ra & His Arkestra Mayan Temple
3.11 Sun Ra Sky Blues
3.12 Sun Ra Disco 2021
3.13 Sun Ra Rough House Blues
3.14 Sun Ra Cosmo Extensions
3.15 Sun Ra & His Outer Space Arkestra Quest
3.16 Sun Ra & His Outer Space Arkestra Outer Space Plateau
3.17 Sun Ra Arkestra Nuclear War
3.18 Sun Ra Arkestra Sometimes I’m Happy
3.19 Sun Ra Arkestra On Jupiter Cosmo Drama (Prophetika 1)
3.20 Sun Ra Arkestra Cosmo Drama (Prophetika 2)
3.21 Sun Ra I Am The Instrument
CD -> EAC (FLAC) -> Tag & Rename (tags/cover) -> dBPowerAmp (MP3/lame -v0)
Anthology info
How do you pin down Sun Ra? The cosmic jazzman laid down so much music it would take a warehouse of full-time historians working round-the-clock hours to figure it all out. Albums were often hastily assembled from his prolific sessions, packaged with DIY artwork and sold at gigs for quick cash. Thousands of hours of unheard recordings are rumored to exist. Maybe he stacked boxes of magnetic tape on far-away planets too, such was his connection to the stars.
If it’s even possible to traverse the vast Sun Ra universe on board a single starship, then Strut Records’ new compilation Singles: The Definitive 45s Collection offers a compellingly sturdy vessel. It’s a 65-track set of 7-inch fragments of the celestial god, sent to earth to help us map out details of his galaxy that the albums could not. There are no wasted motions here: Each flat, wax disc represented another bright star in the constellation Ra.
The name of his birth certificate read Herman Poole Blount. Born in Alabama in 1914, the mysterious musician showed up in Chicago in 1946 with little more to his name than a jail record picked up for refusing to fight in World War II for ethical reasons. The jazz scene was primed for revolution and Blount moved to a different beat, driven by a journey to Saturn he claimed he made years earlier while in deep spiritual concentration.
The star man would later take up the name Sun Ra, form his ever-changing band the Arkestra, and spend a lifetime teaching the world Afrofuturism, a complex ideology of Black nationalism, Egyptian myth, scientific discovery, science fiction movies and the other-worldly fashion choices he’d flaunt on-stage. Forget “Disco 2000”; Sun Ra was envisioning to the paranoid blips and beeps of “Disco 2021” some 30 years before Pulp showed up. He mastered the electro squiggles of “Planet Rock” prior to the birth of hip-hop, and forged his own form of analogue cyberpunk as Philip K. Dick sat as his typewriter laying out his own dark vision of the future. Singles preserves all that for future generations.
It’s said when you watch classic movies like Citizen Kane today, it’s important to bare in mind that these movies were writing the rules of filmmaking that we now take for granted. Sun Ra’s music somehow doesn’t require that kind of explanation. As soon as the needle drops, it sounds like scripture—a key testament that formed a building block of a half-century of music. Everyone from George Clinton to OutKast read from The Book of Ra.
And yet, on paper the project seems an odd prospect. Sun Ra was a lot of things—pianist, bluesman, bandleader, arranger, interstellar poet, multiverse traveller—but he’s never been accused of being a singles artist. Because of the format, Singles eschews his lengthier wigouts for shorter vignettes. You might not get the 20-minute avant-garde virtuosity of “Space Is the Place,” but you do get jaunty holiday jingle “It’s Christmas Time.” That might seem less crucial, but when grappling with Ra’s slippery legacy, nothing here feels disposable.
For the fanatics, Singles will offer little they’ve not heard before. While the original 45 versions of a lot of these songs, many of which were released on Ra’s own El Saturn Records, are rare (or, in some cases, completely lost), they’ve all cropped up in other places, including a similar-but-less-expansive compilation put out by Evidence Records in 1996. Still, there’s undoubted power in hearing Ra’s career laid out like this.
Arranged chronologically (or as close to it as possible—Ra wasn’t exactly pedantic when it came to labeling his sessions) and with about half the songs recorded during his 1950s Chicago period, Singles captures the genesis of his forward-thinking space-bop. Fittingly, the opening two tracks, “I Am an Instrument” and “I Am Strange,” both spoken-word numbers, predict his metaphysical interests. “I belong to one who is more than a musician/He is an artist,” he says on the former. His voice is tuned low and grave, as though foreshadowing a seismic event.
Whether he’s envisioning a playful, pamphlet-utopian version of the city on the Lieber-Stoller-esque “Chicago USA” or mixing experimental rhythms with dense and fractured chants on “Spaceship Lullaby” (both recorded with the Nu Sounds, an important precursor to the Arkestra), it’s thrilling to hear Ra connect Chicago’s timeless jazz scene to his increasingly wild tinkerings. Even the earliest material on Singles is the sound of a bandleader confidently wielding his arsenal for maximum purpose.
It’s not just Ra that gets shine. Singles captures The Arkestra at their finest. John Gilmore, a chief lieutenant in the group for almost 40 years, blusters with his tenor saxophone on the peppy “Soft Talk,” recorded in his first few years alongside Ra. The gentle horn riff of “Space Loneliness”—from 1960, Ra’s final year in Chicago—pulls you towards the void of the outer cosmos before blissful and delicate solos from Phil Cohran (cornet) and Marshall Allen (alto sax) chime in.
Given the nature of the format, Singles also showcases Ra’s pop instincts. Whether it’s the smooth doo-wop of “Daddy’s Gonna Tell You Know Lie” (of which there are two versions), the wild-man energy of singer Yochanan on blistering R&B number “Hot Skillet Momma,” or Hattie Randolph’s sweet rendition of jazz standard “Round Midnight,” it’s a thrill to hear Ra carve out lean jukebox jams. On “Bye Bye,” the sweet harmonies of the Cosmic Rays are drowned out by short, sharp skewering of double bass that tears through the final few seconds. Recorded a decade before George Martin was doing that sort of thing, it confirms that even in the pop realm, Ra was a daring futurist.
The later work sees Ra fully exploring the outer realms of his own talent. “Disco 2021” sounds like an android’s fever dream. A doomed but dinky organ holds hands with a Gilmore-led wind quartet on the ugly-beautiful “Outer Space Plateau.” Ra incorporates a Moog synth into “The Perfect Man”; probably recorded in mid-1973, he deploys a bluesy horn riff as the bedrock before running wild with the synthetic instrument. It’s a strange mismatch, but “The Perfect Man” feels like a rare link between dapper nightclub blues and the space-bound sounds of new wave, disco and early hip-hop. The song encapsulates Sun Ra’s freewheeling, alien brilliance.
The London-based Strut Records has long been prolific in unearthing and reissuing old music and has gotten pretty damn good at it. The three-disc CD and LP releases of Singles: The Definitive 45s Collection includes a lot of the trimmings you might expect: rare photos, artwork, sleeve notes and an interview with El Saturn Records founder Alton Abraham. There’s also detailed track-by-track and session notes by project compiler Paul Griffiths that you’ll open up a lot as you grapple with this set. Strut is experienced in dusting off old recordings, so the remasters sound crisp—particularly when played back-to-back with versions that cropped up on other compilations—but without suffocating that rich 45rpm flavor.
In addition to the CD and digital releases, Strut is putting out 20 cuts from the collection in two 45s box sets (Volume 1 released this month, Volume 2 released in March 2017) in a limited 500 copies run for the dedicated looking to fully immerse in the spirit of their original releases. For newcomers here for spiritual guidance, broaching Sun Ra’s seismic life work can be daunting. To penetrate the outer atmosphere and splash down into an unknown world; to crawl into a mind of a man with the power to transport his consciousness across our solar system. Singles offers a wide-ranging but accessible route to his unearthly sounds.