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Sun Ra Arkestra at SFJAZZ Center

Courtesy Rick Swig

Grateful Dead
band / ensemble / orchestrab.1965
The Grateful Dead and the Sun Ra Arkestra have more similarities than one might think. Both Dead & Company and the Sun Ra Arkestra, an orchestral entity evolving both spiritually and musically since the 1950s, have ardent followers as well as tons of recordings, including numerous live recordings made by ardent, peripatetic fans who have followed them around from show to show. Many books have been written about both.

Phil Lesh
bass, electric1940 - 2024
The Arkestra is not a retro band that lives in the past. Several albums have been pressed in recent times, notably Swirling (Strut Records, 2020) and Living Sky (OmniSound, 2022). Given the talent shown by its current members, we can expect more in the future. After all, since the founding of Saturn Records in the 1950s, the Arkestra's output has been prolific, both in terms of originals and reissues.
How did this trailblazing ensemble get its start? It all came down to one farsighted individual. Born in Birmingham, Alabama, on May 22, 1914, Herman Poole Blount was known as Sonny from an early age. In either 1936 or 1937, during the only year at Alabama A&M University in Huntsville for which Blount was able to swing the financing, he had a dream vision wherein mysterious robed figures summoned him. He was admonished to stand inside a beam of light before being transmitted to the planet Saturn. After a fellow dormitory resident read his diary entry referencing this to the dorm's fellow students, he took the name Sun Ra. As he put it to biographer John F. Szwed:
..."my whole body changed into something else. I could see through myself. And I went up I wasn't in human form I landed on a planet that I identified as Saturn; they teleported me and I was down on [a] stage with them. They wanted to talk with me. They had one little antenna on each ear. A little antenna over each eye. They talked to me. They told me to stop [attending college] because there was going to be great trouble in schools the world was going into complete chaos. I would speak [through music], and the world would listen. That's what they told me."
His Sonny Blount Orchestra became the top swing band in Alabama. But Ra was not satisfied. Purchasing a one-way train ticket in January 1946 to Chicago, Ra found work as a pianist and arranger for

Fletcher Henderson
arranger1897 - 1952
Then he came up with the name Sun Ra Arkestra, It was a clever name choice as "Arkestra" spells "ra" both backward and forward. The band was varyingly billed as the Myth Science Arkestra and also as Sun Ra and his Solar Arkestra. Ra made his first recording with his longstanding Arkestra band member
Pat Patrick
saxophoneb.1929

John Gilmore
saxophone, tenor1931 - 1995

John Coltrane
saxophone1926 - 1967

Danny Ray Thompson
saxophone, baritone
Marshall Allen
saxophone, altob.1924

Pharoah Sanders
saxophone, tenor1940 - 2022

Billy Higgins
drums1936 - 2001

B.B. King
guitar, electric1925 - 2015
Johnny "Guitar" Watson
guitar, electric1935 - 1996
By the late 1950s, the Arkestra was donning innovative Egyptian or science fiction-themed clothing. In a truly futuristic move, they began projecting films during performances while marching around venues and vocalizing while playing drums and horns.
The groundbreaking low-budget film Cry of Jazz was released in 1959. Sun Ra went on to produce hundreds of recordings and toured extensively. Ra became one of the first musicians to adopt a Moog synthesizer (after inventor Robert Moog gifted him one in 1970). Not only was this the first synthesizer employed by a jazz group, but it also may mark the first use of an electric instrument of any kind employed in a jazz ensemble. He also held a short 1971 UC Berkeley-stint teaching a course titled "The Black Man in the Cosmos." Following Ra's transition back to Saturn in 1993, the ensemble was fronted successively by Gilmore and, following Gilmore's passing in 1955, by Allen. Band members still reside in the "Sun Ra House" at 5626 Morton Street in Philadelphia's Germantown. Their abode has been designated as a historical landmark. Sun Ra moved the band here after their NYC rental house was sold in 1968.
All of that past history was very much present when the Arkestra took the stage. Four evenings dubbed "The Exploratory Side of Sun Ra." were split into two segments. The first two nights featured the more avant-garde jazzy sounds whereas the final two were titled "Swinging with Sunny" and had more tunes catering to the dance crowd who stood in front on all the nights. Certain tunes, however. were repeated on all four nights. In addition to the dynamic horn section, handclapping and audience participation both played a role in each performance.
On the first night, the onstage mood was set when a starry sky was projected above the stage on the ceiling. The band was assembled, clad in their space-age glittering best. Vocalist

Tara Middleton
vocals
Knoel Scott
saxophone, altob.1956
Each Arkestra tune followed a pattern. Often bassist

Tyler Mitchell
bassb.1958

Farid Barron
piano
Chris Hemingway
saxophone, altoVocalist Tara Middleton stepped off the stage for instrumental numbers and re-emerged when it was again her turn to shrine. Cellist Kash Killian, who has toured with the Arkestra since 1991, enriched the evenings with both his ensemble and solo playing. Scott would give the band signals, pick up his baritone (one of two played in the band) and blast solos, turn remarkable somersaults at the edge of the stage, and join other members in parading around the audiencea well-established Arkestra practice that " data-original-title="" title="">Violent Femmes lovingly pinched to incorporate into their act.
No matter which night one attended, one could expect a series of stellar improvisatory soloswhether they be from acoustic bassist Mitchell or pianist Barron. Barron conjured wondrous sounds from both his grand piano and Moog synthesizer. On occasion, he would toss his leg up atop his soulful-sounding stand-up piano keyboard.
Classics such as "We Travel the Spaceways" and "Space Is The Place" were both performed each evening. "Tapestry from an Asteroid" was played the first two nights, and "Dancing Shadows," "Chopin" and "Night of the Living Sky" were performed that first evening. Scott also briefly displayed a painting of Sun Ra to the audience.
Friday night's opener "We're Living in the Space Age" was followed by "Dancing Shadows," "What color are you? / Are you the color of fog? / Are you the color of sound? / Are you the color of thought, singularity, sight simularity?" Two trumpet players stepped out stage right to blow frantically as the band segued into a polyphonic jam. Worthington intoned on flute. During the dynamic "Angels and Demons At Play," Barron came down cacophonously on his 88s with the palms of his hands. Two percussionists
Elson Nascimento
percussion
Abdullah Ibrahim
pianob.1934
The dynamic, African-redolent tune "Boma" was another highlight of the evening. "Chopin" and

Coleman Hawkins
saxophone, tenor1904 - 1969
"Door of the Cosmos," the Saturday-night opener, was followed by a version of "I Left My Heart in San Francisco," a tribute to recently transitioned

Tony Bennett
vocals1926 - 2023
Sunday night included such classics as "Saturn" and "Cherokee." The night ended with a short but sweet encore duet between Scott and Middleton on "They'll Come Back." And indeed the Arkestra will!
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Live Review
Sun Ra Arkestra
Harry S. Pariser
United States
California
Grateful Dead
The Dead & Company
Phil Lesh
MC5
Sonic Youth
Violent Femmes
Fletcher Henderson Orchestra
John Gilmore
John Coltrane
Danny Ray Thompson
Julian Priester
Pharoah Sanders
Billy Higgins
B. B. King
Johnny "Guitar" Watson
Robert Moog
Tara Middleton
Knoel Scott
Marshall Allen
Tyler Mitchell
Farid Barron
Chris Hemingway
Kash Killian
Elson Nascimento
Jorge De Silva
George Grey
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