Monorails and Satellites

Monorails and Satellites, Volumes I & II are two albums of solo piano compositions by the American Jazz musician Sun Ra. Both recorded in 1966, Volume 1 was released in 1968 under the title "Monorails And Satellites" and Volume II was released in 1974 under the title "Monorails & Satellites", both on Sun Ra's own Saturn label. The first volume was reissued on compact disc by Evidence in 1992, whilst the second volume has yet to be reissued. The album showcases Ra's skills as a pianist, which are often compared to Cecil Taylor's;

'Monorails and Satellites, a 1966 solo piano recording, showcases Ra's unique style, which bridges the bluesy architecture of Jelly Roll Morton with the angularity of Monk and Cecil Taylor's ascent beyond traditional structure.' [4]

Monorails and Satellites
Studio album by
ReleasedVolume 1, 1968 [1]
Volume II, 1974
Recorded1966, New York [1]
GenreJazz
LabelSaturn
Evidence
ProducerAlton Abraham
Sun Ra chronology
Strange Strings
(1966)
Monorails and Satellites
(1968)
Atlantis
(1967)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[2]
Rolling Stone[3]

According to Ra's biographer, John Szwed, the title might refer to Stanley Kubrick's 2001, featuring a monolith that Ra remembered as a monorail, 'perhaps connecting it to his UFO experience'.[5] Both albums shared the same sleeve of disembodied hands playing a keyboard that seems to be plugged directly into Saturn.

Track listing

Volume 1, 12" Vinyl

All songs by Sun Ra except Easy Street;
Side A:

  1. "Space Towers" - (3.37)
  2. "Cogitation" - (6.36)
  3. "Skylight" - (3.59)
  4. "The Alter Destiny" - (3.08)

Side B:

  1. "Easy Street" - (Jones) - (3.38)
  2. "Blue Differentials" - (2.54)
  3. "Monorails and Satellites" - (5.36)
  4. "The Galaxy Sun" - (3.17)

Volume 2, 12" Vinyl

All songs by Sun Ra
Side A:

  1. "Astro Vision" - (3.10)
  2. "The Ninth Eye" - (9.00)
  3. "Solar Boats" - (5.00)

Side B:

  1. "Perspective Prisms of Is" - (6.20)
  2. "Calundronius" - (8.00)

Musician

  • Sun Ra - piano, and electronics on Astro Vision

Recorded at the Sun Studios, New York, (the commune where the Arkestra lived), 1966 [1]

Notes

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