Sun Ra - Space Is The Place (1973)

  • 28 Jan, 22:04
  • change text size:

Artist:
Title: Space Is The Place
Year Of Release: 1998
Label: Impulse! [IMP 12492]
Genre: Jazz, Free Jazz
Quality: FLAC (image + .cue,log,scans) | MP3/320 kbps
Total Time: 43:01
Total Size: 298 MB(+3%) | 102 MB(+3%)
WebSite:

Tracklist

01. Space Is The Place (21:15)
02. Images (6:16)
03. Discipline (4:53)
04. Sea of Sounds (7:42)
05. Rocket Number Nine (2:55)
Sun Ra - Space Is The Place (1973)

personnel :

Sun Ra – Farfisa organ (1, 3, 4, 5), piano (2), arrangement
Akh Tal Ebah – vocals (1), trumpet (2), flugelhorn (4)
Kwame Hadi (Lamont McClamb) – trumpet (2, 4)
Marshall Allen – flute (3), alto saxophone (4)
Danny Davis – flute (3), alto saxophone (4)
John Gilmore – vocals (1, 5), tenor saxophone (2, 3, 4)
Danny Thompson – baritone saxophone (1), flute (3), vocals (5)
Eloe Omoe – bass clarinet (1, 5), flute (3)
Pat Patrick – bass guitar (1, 2), baritone saxophone (4), vocals (5)
Lex Humphries – drums (4)
Atakatun (Stanley Morgan) – percussion (4)
Odun (Russel Branch) – percussion (4)
June Tyson – vocals (1, 5)
Ruth Wright – vocals (1, 5)
Cheryl Banks – vocals (1, 5)
Judith Holton – vocals (1, 5)

Space Is the Place provides an excellent introduction to Sun Ra's vast and free-form jazz catalog. Typical of many Sun Ra recordings, the program is varied; earthbound songs, like the swing number "Images" and Egyptian exotica piece "Discipline," fit right in with more space-age cuts, like the tumultuous "Sea of Sounds" and the humorous "Rocket Number Nine." Sun Ra fuses many of these styles on the sprawling title cut, as interlocking harmonies, African percussion, manic synthesizer lines, and joyous ensemble blowing all jell into some sort of church revival of the cosmos. Throughout the recording, Sun Ra displays his typically wide-ranging talents on space organ and piano, reed players John Gilmore and Marshall Allen contribute incisive and intense solos, and June Tyson masterfully leads the Space Ethnic Voices on dreamy vocal flights. This is a fine recording and a must for Sun Ra fans.~Stephen Cook