FICTION

The Cosmobiography of Sun Ra: The Sound of Joy is Enlightening

illus. by Chris Raschka. 40p. Candlewick. May 2014. Tr $15.99. ISBN 9780763658069. LC 2013944131.
COPY ISBN
RedReviewStarGr 3–6—Raschka's proven ability to convey in words and images the musical essence of composers or traditions as diverse as Sergei Prokofiev, John Coltrane, and Shaker hymnody now extends to the avant-garde jazz of Herman "Sonny" Blount. Carefully selected details respect subject and audience: "Sun Ra always said that he came from Saturn. Now, you and I know that this is silly…. And yet. If he did…it would explain so much. Let's say he did…." Readers learn that this "intergalactic boulevardier" was born in Birmingham, had an early aptitude for music, and enjoyed reading about philosophy. They discover his views on race and war, meet the "Arkestra," and follow his global footprints. It is the art, however, that transmits the showman's spirit and eclectic sound that featured big band elements, synthesizers, improvisation, and percussion. Raschka pulls out all the stops in what may be his finest work yet. Strong, black outlines define richly layered, multi-hued watercolors. The artist captures both the focused intensity of a composer's face in an intimate close-up and the verve of a musician playing through celestial cityscapes. Wet and dry brush strokes create a lively but fluid dynamic, while stars and motion lines electrify. Musical composition paper is cleverly integrated into particular page designs, including the cover, in which the musician, arrayed in his dazzling robe, is one with the staff and hand-lettered title. Endpapers display album titles; a selected discography is available. Pull up a YouTube recording, and enchant a new generation with this ode to transcendental joy.—Wendy Lukehart, District of Columbia Public Library
Jazz pioneer and free-spirited iconoclast Sun Ra (he believed he came from Saturn) gets a portrait as bemusing as the man himself in this fantastical tribute. Raschka's trademark loose gestural style is effective in reflecting his subject's untethered spirit and impenetrable persona. The images themselves are dense and dynamic, full of brilliant color and heavy black. List of selected recordings appended.
Jazz pioneer and self-proclaimed space case Sun Ra (born Herman P. Blount) gets a portrait as bemusing and sparkly as the man himself in this fantastical tribute. Raschka begins by identifying Sun Ra as a free-spirited iconoclast who believed that he came from Saturn, simple as that. From there Raschka offers readers a linear history of Sun Ra's musical education and innovation, in a direct, admiring narrative. The pianist and bandleader journeys from Birmingham to Chicago, where he forms his famed collective the Arkestra, and on to New York and Philadelphia, with stops across Europe and at the Great Pyramids (his favorite place) along the way. This is not the first time Raschka has captured jazz in imagery (Charlie Parker Played Be Bop, rev. 11/92; John Coltrane's Giant Steps, rev. 9/02), and here his trademark loose gestural style is especially effective in reflecting both the subject's untethered spirit and impenetrable persona. The images themselves are dense and dynamic, painted on a variety of textured papers and musical notation sheets and full of brilliant color and heavy black. Raschka clips and arranges them in irregular, rectilinear space, attempting to capture this individual force of nature. In the end, readers get a bright, impressionistic portrait that follows its subject's refusal to play by the rules. A brief author's note and list of selected recordings are appended. thom barthelmess

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