The Wisdom of Sun Ra: Sun Ra's Polemical Broadsheets and Streetcorner Leaflets
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Average customer review:Product Description
While in Chicago during the mid-1950s, Sun Ra preached on street corners and occasionally created scripts to accompany his lectures—intricate texts that invoke science fiction, Biblical prophecy, etymology, and black nationalism. Until this point, the only broadsheet known to exist was one given to John Coltrane in 1956. These newly unearthed writings attest to the provocative brilliance that inspired Coltrane. Sun Ra annotated many of them by hand, and together the sheets reveal fascinating new aspects of his worldview.
The Wisdom of Sun Ra is an invaluable compendium of writings by one of the most intriguing and influential jazz figures of the century.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #98299 in Books
- Published on: 2006-08-01
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 144 pages
Editorial Reviews
Review
"John Corbett''s selection offers a fascinating window on to the weird world of one of the 20th century''s most influential musicians."-Rachel Aspden, New Statesman (Rachel Aspden New Statesman 20060901)
"Includes beautiful reproductions of the dog-eared broadsheets, with full transcriptions in the second half of the book. As interesting as the writings are in their own right, they also offer powerful insights into the personality and philosophy that was central to Ra''s later work."--Peter Margasak, Chicago Reader (Peter Margasak Chicago Reader 20061201)
"Words are, for Ra, plastic things, and the skill of Ra the verbal sculptor reveals hidden unities. . . . Indeed, his attitude towards his audience is continuously provocative."--The Wire (Tom Perchard The Wire 20061201)
"Every one of these essays has the right balance of shocking pull quotes and elliptical statements to make you keep reading. . . . Revealing."--Bookforum (Ben Ratliff Bookforum 20060817)
"This collection of his early writings illuminates his journey from street-corner Egyptologist and religious proclaimer to the innovative bandleader proclaiming alien origins whose music has influenced artists from John Coltrane to Sonic Youth. . . . The publication of this book offers a visit to a time where we can see some of Sun Ra''s earlier ideas, what shaped the later artist. Reading this collection makes you realize that you need to question what you see and define your own path, just like Sun Ra did."-Erik Sweet, Rain Taxi (Erik Sweet Rain Taxi )
"Known for his talent as a jazz composer, bandleader and keyboardist . . . Sun Ra also made a name for himself with his ''cosmic philosophy,'' which curious fans everywhere can now read thanks to The Wisdom of Sun-Ra. . . . For those wanting to look further into Sun Ra's philosophies-and willing to spend the $20 to do so-The Wisdom of Sun-Ra contains a treasure trove of material."--Jazz Times (Roxana Hadadi Jazz Times )
About the Author
Sun Ra (1914–93) was a jazz composer, bandleader, synthesizer player, and musical innovator.
Customer Reviews
The Reach For A Better World
Being that he was a freejazz pioneer, Sun Ra was also naturally a deepspace thinker. This book collects a bunch of early dispatches directly from the uniquely racially and numerically-obsessed mind of one of the true greats of modern music. This is a dimension only hinted at in his song lyrics. It is full-on cosmic weirdness to the highest degree. The book is equally as "unreadable" as his music is "unlistenable". It taps a vein that, thank god, very few of us have access to and it shines a bright light on some of what made this complex man tick. Up until now, his primarily white audiences probably have had no clue what he was really about, unless they happened to catch his low-budge cultfilm "Space is the Place". Here, his apparent frustrations about being black in America are turned into kooky political/religious ranting prose and his fascination with numbers is woven in as if it were just part of the same sort of cosmic conversation. Madness or genius? You decide. Bonus: the book features nice scans of the original, typed papers, plus much more legible transcriptions. It's a lot to ask of a reader, but also a cool supplement to the available music. It is a very short read, thus the less-than-best rating.



