This recording catches Sun Ra in 1963, when he and the key personnel of his Arkestra were well settled in New York and in their most creative period. It's unusual in illustrating just how elements of the city's free jazz were entering the Arkestra's music, just as they were influencing it. Sun Ra's piano is far more animated than usual, at times resembling the dense percussive playing of early Cecil Taylor, while "The Ecstasy of Being" suggests the direct influence of Ornette Coleman and his drummer Ed Blackwell on Danny Davis and Clifford Jarvis. Several short tracks feature a single reed player along with trumpeter Walter Miller and the rhythm section. Marshall Allen's oboe is suitably exotic on "Celestial Fantasy," while Pat Patrick's baritone brings a rugged beauty to the ballad "When Angels Speak of Love." "The Idea of It All" is an intense, twisting line that inspires a coiling, kinetic solo from tenor saxophonist John Gilmore. The whole reed section is present in all its brilliance on "Next Stop Mars," chanting "We'll take a trip to space/The next stop Mars" before Sun Ra's piano leads them into a diverse, extended journey where saxophone multiphonics and mechanical reverb are just part of the scenery. Originally released on Sun Ra's Saturn label in 1966, this has been one of the rarest of his LPs. --Stuart Broomer
When Angels Speak of Love,Sun Ra & His Myth Science Arkestra,Evidence,Avant-Garde Jazz,Experimental Big Band,Free Jazz,Jazz,Jazz Music,Pop
Jazz Music:
- Whenever I Seem To Be Far Away
- World Staesman [Import] [Original recording remastered]
- Wrap Your Troubles In Dreams
- 1946-1947, Vol. 2
- 1954 Memorial Album [Import]
- 1997 Panasonic Village Jazz Festival [Live]
- 2nd Wave [Import]
- Another Think Coming [Enhanced]
- Authenticity
- Better Late Than Never
Jazz Music
Liszt Played On Liszt's Piano: Années de Pélerinage, 3ème année
Music: Preflyte [Import] [Original recording remastered]