Home » Jazz Articles » Album Review » Sun Ra: Monorails & Satellites: Works For Solo Piano Vols. 1, 2, 3
Sun Ra: Monorails & Satellites: Works For Solo Piano Vols. 1, 2, 3
BySun Ra
piano1914 - 1993
Monorails & Satellites Volumes 1 and 2 were recorded in 1966 and released two years later. The subsequent but previously unreleased additional material from those sessions (Volume 3) are now included in this three-CD set. A three-LP edition is also available, both of which include liner notes from noted pianist

Vijay Iyer
pianob.1971
Other visits include memorable takes on other standards such as "Don't Blame Me" and "Gone With The Wind." Like

Thelonious Monk
piano1917 - 1982
That's always been the charm of listening to artists who kind of play it straight, but not really. And, like

Cecil Taylor
piano1929 - 2018
Which is what makes packages like this so damn interesting. Sun Ra is known primarily as a bandleader and composer/orchestrator. And for good reason. His primary instrument, as with

Duke Ellington
piano1899 - 1974

John Gilmore
saxophone, tenor1931 - 1995
The thing about this piano music from Sun Ra that sticks to you like the salt off a favorite crunchy. It's non-virtuosic virtuosity. Like Ellington, Ra's piano brings you in. An amazing technique isn't the thing; it's the weirdness of something that feels very common, everyday.
Disc One is intimate in a different way. "Cognition" takes a choppier, attacking and unsettled vibe and follows it by way of a more familiar one with the serene, gentle "Skylight.," The earth and sky shift back and forth, in and out, up and down, the material not necessarily having anything to do with melody or conventional song structure. Think more exploratory, expansive, further dimensions of the piano, the piano as platform, a launching pad. And without all the bells and whistles. Not so much trippy as trip-like. Modest with outsized energies. Chords and lines within a certain tonality.
Some of the music might sound like thinking out loud, scattershot with nothing but a turnaround to show for it. The outward-bound, reverb-laden "Astro Vision" plays like a kind of cosmic/Outer Limits intrusion alongside Ra's more saloon-like ivory tickling. And one can only speculate as to what was going through Ra's mind on his manic-sounding juggernaut excursions through the nine-minute "The Ninth Eye" and "Solar Boats." But then, a seemingly wayward tune like "The Alter Destiny" suddenly becomes another parlor song of sorts, the followup standard "Easy Street" only enhancing what came before with it's gentle, relaxed stride and pretty melody, reminding us once again of Ra's deep roots in the jazz tradition.
Sun Ra the pianist was Sun Ra the Arkestra in miniature. Modest in magnitude. ">
Track Listing
Space Towers; Cognition; Skylight; The Alter Destiny; Easy Street; Blue Differentials; Monorails and Satellites; The Galaxy Way; Astro Vision; The Ninth Eye; Solar Boats; Perspective Prisms of Is; Colundronius; Soundscapes; The Eternal Tomorrow; Today Is Not Yesterday; World Island Festival; The Changing Wind; Don't Blame Me; Gone With The Wind; How Am I To Know; Yesterdays.
Personnel
Sun Ra
pianoSun Ra: piano.
Album information
Title: Monorails & Satellites: Works For Solo Piano Vols. 1, 2, 3 | Year Released: 2019 | Record Label: Cosmic Myth Records
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