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Sun Ra Arkestra - Live At The Palomino, L.A., 1988 (Vol. 1)
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DVD Cover InformationActor: Sun Ra Brand: MUSIC VIDEO DISTRIBUTORS DVD: Region Code 1 Audio: English (Original Language) Format: Closed-captioned, Color, DVD, NTSC Picture Format: 1.33:1 Running Time: 93 minutes DVD Release Date: 2009-11-10 Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated) Model: TRANS170 Studio: Transparency Product features: - Running Time 93 Mins. System Requirements: 93 minute concert by the SUN RA ARKESTRA (featuring Sun Ra and Don Cherry) at the Palomino in North Hollywood, November 5 1988. Also includes an interview with SUN RA and DON CHERRY. Region 0, NTSC. Format: DVD AUDIO Genre: MUSIC DVD Rating: NR Age: 716205017094 UPC: 716205017094 Manufacturer No: TRANS170
Movie Reviews of Sun Ra Arkestra - Live At The Palomino, L.A., 1988 (Vol. 1)Movie Review: Seeing the Sun Summary: 4 Stars
I saw Sun Ra. Live. Twice. Maybe you didn't. If you didn't, then you are out of luck because every Arkestra show was an event that defies recording, each show tailor made for the venue, the town, the time and the state of the cosmos.
I just watched my copy of this DVD, and none of the arrangements are familiar, many songs are new to me, all sorts of new sounds. But I didn't feel part of the show, and that is inevitable. This isn't Michael Jackson -- You didn't watch the Arkestra, you rode it, it wrapped around you and swept you away and hurled you into a space that just doesn't capture to film or disc, and I don't care if it's Robert Mugge's Joyful Noise or the BBC's Brother from Another Planet ... or some fan so thoughtful of the precious importance of this moment that they smuggled in a portable camera and snuck us a view of an alien encounter.
These Transparency issues always get slammed for production merits. That's all wrong, production is irrelevent. All you CAN get is a shadow of a moment, and that's what this is. A shadow, a shadow that someone was kind enough put put in a can and share with the rest of us for a reasonable price. I'm ok with that.
If you'd seen Sun Ra, this film, like the others on Transparency, are precious documents rife with insight and detail for those who can see beyond the production values. If you hadn't seen Sun Ra, well, folks, this is all you get; you can still see many of these sidemen under the very capable direction of Marshall Allen (and you should because they're ice hot) but you've missed out on Ra, on June Tyson's voice, on John Gilmore's tenor (Coltrane rated John as the top). To get at those moments, all you get are shadows on disc and films like this, and if you dig such things, you won't care if this was recorded off a broken TV using wobbly rabbit ears.
Fortunately it isn't, Palomino was shot using a stable 1988-vintage consumer camera -- it's still a view through a mirror darkly, tantelizing and naive and sometimes frustrating, like photos of Nessie, but it could be a LOT worse. Do remember, these were all originally covert films. Transparency has legitimized them by striking a fair deal with the band and the videographer, but at that time, this film was a product of 90% enthusiasm and only 10% skill and hardware. It's a fan-made home-movie, made because they just had to SHOW somebody 'cause NOBODY would believe them otherwise. End of story.
But what it captures! This is an Arkestra roughly the same as appears on disc in the Live at the Pit-Inn, Tokyo recording, with three guitars (two jazz, one of them very rock-electric) and five saxophones, just after the classic Space Opera shows. This is also, I will wager, the first set, so it's going to begin with various duet improv building to a space chord, then moves into vocal space-swing ballads, a barrel-house blues and a good dose of Fletcher Henderson (with 'corrected' harmonies); it's a big-band field-day with trad horn vamps and riffs played against wild space-guitar and searing way-outside solos from Marshall, John and Michael. Do parts drag? Through the lens from that back-bench, maybe yes and maybe the camera was sitting under the focus of the main PA speakers so it biases amplified instruments, but I'll bet it was a different story to those who were up at the front under the full dynamic range of surround-sound rhythm beats and microtonal horn voicings.
Don't watch this for the parts you don't get, watch it for the parts you do get. Enjoy it.
And then there's the extra material, taken from a 1989 appearance on the NYC New Visions show: the duet between Sun Ra on grand piano and Don Cherry on pocket trumpet is itself worth the $18 for this DVD. This is Sun Ra merging his considerable classical training and deep understanding of twentieth century piano composers (jazz and classical) played against that quiet peaceful right-note sincerity of Don Cherry. It's beautiful.
The interview is interesting too, Sun Ra played against the foil of a late 80's era Big City VJ, and I realize the interviewer with his practiced voice form and camera skills is trying to be hip and fair, but the questions he asks, and the demure answers he gets! it's pure Sun Ra. "So is Sun Ra heading for commercial success?"
two guesses what he says ...
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