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When Angels Speak of Love
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When Angels Speak of Love
Current price: $13.99
Barnes and Noble
When Angels Speak of Love
Current price: $13.99
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Size: CD
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Sun Ra
's music is often described as being so far outside the jazz mainstream as to be less a challenge to it than a largely irrelevant curiosity. But
When Angels Speak of Love
, an album recorded with his
Myth Science Arkestra
during rehearsals at the Choreographers Workshop in New York in 1963 and released on
Ra
's own
Saturn
label in 1966, is very much within then-current trends in jazz as performed by such innovators as
John Coltrane
and
Ornette Coleman
.
John Corbett
, annotator of a later reissue, pointed out
's disdain for the term "free jazz," but this is music that fits into that style and even harks back to bebop on occasion.
Walter Miller
's trumpet playing on
"The Idea of It All,"
for example, clearly indicates that he's been listening to
Miles Davis
, even as
John Gilmore
's squealing tenor suggests
Coltrane
, and, on
"Ecstacy of Being,"
what
Corbett
calls
Danny Davis
' "excruciated alto" suggests
Coleman
himself frequently plays busy, seemingly formless passages that are reminiscent of
Cecil Taylor
. An even closer approximation of a traditional approach can be found on the relatively brief title track, a ballad that, while not exactly sweet, is surprisingly sober and expressive. Of course, that's followed by the band chanting
"Next Stop Mars"
and going off in all directions on the 18-minute final track. The album's rarity on vinyl may be not only because few copies were pressed initially, but also because this is a
album that is more conventionally unconventional than most, with tracks you could program next to those of his 1960s contemporaries and have them fit right in. ~ William Ruhlmann
's music is often described as being so far outside the jazz mainstream as to be less a challenge to it than a largely irrelevant curiosity. But
When Angels Speak of Love
, an album recorded with his
Myth Science Arkestra
during rehearsals at the Choreographers Workshop in New York in 1963 and released on
Ra
's own
Saturn
label in 1966, is very much within then-current trends in jazz as performed by such innovators as
John Coltrane
and
Ornette Coleman
.
John Corbett
, annotator of a later reissue, pointed out
's disdain for the term "free jazz," but this is music that fits into that style and even harks back to bebop on occasion.
Walter Miller
's trumpet playing on
"The Idea of It All,"
for example, clearly indicates that he's been listening to
Miles Davis
, even as
John Gilmore
's squealing tenor suggests
Coltrane
, and, on
"Ecstacy of Being,"
what
Corbett
calls
Danny Davis
' "excruciated alto" suggests
Coleman
himself frequently plays busy, seemingly formless passages that are reminiscent of
Cecil Taylor
. An even closer approximation of a traditional approach can be found on the relatively brief title track, a ballad that, while not exactly sweet, is surprisingly sober and expressive. Of course, that's followed by the band chanting
"Next Stop Mars"
and going off in all directions on the 18-minute final track. The album's rarity on vinyl may be not only because few copies were pressed initially, but also because this is a
album that is more conventionally unconventional than most, with tracks you could program next to those of his 1960s contemporaries and have them fit right in. ~ William Ruhlmann