This is one of the best biographies of a jazz musician that I've ever read. Sun Ra is a difficult subject, at best; one of the most misunderstood, maligned, and mocked characters in the field -- and at the same time one of the most influential.
I first encountered Sun Ra in a pamphlet on the information table in the music department while in college. The pamphlet listed various musicians and persons in the musical field who were available for lectures, performances, and master classes at colleges and universities. It listed name, affiliation, some representative works, list of topics, location, and a brief biography, and a photo. There I found such staid, upright people as Morton Feldman, Morton Subotnick, Steve Reich, David Amram, Ron Carter, Anthony Braxton, and a host of others, from various parts of the country, many affiliated with institutions of higher education. All posed in respectable looking suits or leisure attire.
Then I flipped the page to a picture of a man in flowing, shimmering robes, an Egyptian nemes covering his head, in front of an almost vertical keyboard.
Name: "Sun Ra"
Affiliation: Intergalactic Myth Science Arkestra
Works: Jazz In Silhouette; Cosmic Tones For Mental Therapy; Space Is The Place
Topics: Music of outer space; Chaldaean numerology; Performance themes for astronauts
Location: Saturn
After picking my jaw up from the floor, I went looking for some music by this character, found "Space is the Place" (a quadrophonic vinyl album, no less!), and was hooked. I became a collector of Arkestra albums, and was fortunate enough to see Mr. Ra himself in several live concerts, on both coasts of the continent.
Yet for years, most of what I knew about this man came from cryptic liner notes on his albums and brief, mostly dismissive references in various jazz reference books.
Finally, here is a biography of this iconoclastic genius, who went off the beaten path with a vengeance, stuck to it with superhuman (or maybe extraterrestrial) tenacity, and lured a fair number of high-caliber musicians along with him. Szwed explores the extraordinary life of this musical visionary in depth, with sensitivity and humor. At last, Sun Ra is placed in context, and we're given the background to understand why -- for all the wackiness -- Sonny's music is still being listened to 30 years after his death; some of it 70 years after it was recorded.
Here we not only find documentation of the achievements of a pioneer -- who was playing free-jazz before there was a name for it, and exploring multimedia while Coltrane was still practicing his modal scales -- but we see how these things were embedded in, and in some ways arose from the African-American experience of the day. If you really want to make sense of the music, the philosophy, ethnopoetry, the Egyptian costumes, the outer space connection, and all the rest, this book is essential reading for those interested in the life of one whom many consider to be the founder of Afrofuturism. Well-researched, respectful, insightful, and entertaining.