Sun Ra – Exotica (2017)
[Vol. 1]
00:00 Kingdom of Thunder
03:53 Space Mates (Abridged)
08:40 Star Bright (Previously Unissued)
11:08 The Nile (Part 1)
16:08 Eve
22:01 Tiny Pyramids
25:42 The Lady with the Golden Stockings
33:29 Paradise
37:59 New Horizons
41:03 Portrait of the Living Sky
42:55 India
47:47 Ancient Aiethopia
57:04 Planet Earth
01:02:04 April in Paris (Previously Unissued)
[Vol. 2]
01:05:59 Island in the Sun (Complete Version)
01:16:24 Africa
01:21:31 Friendly Galaxy
01:26:25 Interstellar Low Ways
01:34:52 The Conversion of J.P. (Abridged)
01:41:56 Cha Cha in Outer Space (Previously Unissued)
01:46:35 Brazilian Sun
01:50:34 Lights on a Satellite
01:54:15 Somewhere in Space
02:00:32 Spontaneous Simplicity
02:03:35 Overtones of China
John Szwed in Sun Ra’s biography, Space is The Place :
“Sunny was listening to the Hollywood-inspired music being made by people like David Rose, whose lush, massed string writing could be heard as theme songs on popular radio programs; or to the exotica of people like Martin Denny, who recorded in Honolulu accompanied by animal noises, natural acoustic delay, and reverberation; and especially to the arrangements of Les Baxter, the premier figure in what was being called mood music.
Baxter developed a post-swing style in the late forties and early fifties of spectacular orchestral writing, full of timpani and hand drums, tumbling violin lines, harps, flutes, marimbas, celesta, Latin rhythm vamps, the cries of animals, choral moans, and flamboyant singers, creating imaginary soundscapes which he helped evoke with titles like ’Atlantis,’ ’Voodoo Dreams,’ and ’Pyramid of the Sun.’ Sunny first heard Baxter on Perfume Set to Music (1946) and Music Out of the Moon (1947). Baxter went on to produce records which celebrated the Aztecs (The Sacred Idol, 1959), South Asia (Ports of Pleasure, 1957), Africa and the Middle East (Tamboo!, 1955), and the Caribbean (Caribbean Moonlight, 1956), all of which used Latin rhythms generically, as did his two big band records, African Jazz (1958) and Jungle Jazz (1959). Though later generations would understand this music in strictly utilitarian terms, and hear in it the sounds of air conditioning and the clink of ice in cocktail shakers, for Sunny it was music rich with imagination and suggestion. His genius was to take as raw material what others in the 1950s thought of as ’easy listening’ and turn it into what in the late 1960s would be heard as ’Third World music’ by some and as ’uneasy listening music’ by others.“
Lacquer Cut By – Kevin Gray
Written By – The Sun Ra Arkestra
Tracks 1-12, 1-13, 2-4, 2-10 Stereo. All other selections Mono.
Recordings produced for Sun Ra and Enterplanetary Koncepts (BMI), except: “Tiny Pyramids“ by Ronnie Boykins, Enterplanetary Koncepts (BMI) and “April in Paris“ by Venom Duke and Yip Harburg, Glocca Morra Music Corp., Kay Duke Music, and Universal Music Corp. (ASCAP).
Recordings produced by Sun Ra for Saturn Records, under the business aegis of Alton Abraham
Album produced by Irwin Chusid
Audio transfers by Michael D. Anderson, Sun Ra Music Archive
Audio restoration by Michael D. Anderson and Irwin Chusid
Mastered by Brenan Ford at Sundanized Studios North
Project Management: Jay Miller
Text Editing: Austin Gray and Brian Thompson
Production Coordination: Stephanie Kennedy
Art direction: Laura Lindgreen