Early life He was born Herman Blount on May 22, 1914, in
Birmingham, Alabama, as discovered by his biographer,
John F. Szwed, and published in his 1997 book,
Space Is the Place: The Lives and Times of Sun Ra. He was named after the popular
vaudeville stage magician
Black Herman, who had deeply impressed his mother. His birthday for years remained unknown, as his claims ranged from 1910 to 1918. Only a few years before his death, the date of Sun Ra's birth was still a mystery. Jim Macnie's notes for
Blue Delight (1989) said that Sun Ra was believed to be about 75 years old. This turned out to be correct; Szwed was able to uncover a wealth of information about his early life, and confirmed a birth date of May 22, 1914. and
sight reading music. Birmingham was an important stop for touring musicians and he saw prominent musicians such as
Fletcher Henderson,
Duke Ellington, and
Fats Waller, and other less well known performers. Sun Ra once said, "The world let down a lot of good musicians". In his teenage years, Blount demonstrated prodigious musical talent: many times, according to acquaintances, he went to
big band performances and then produced full transcriptions of the bands' songs from memory. By his mid-teens, Blount was performing semi-professionally as a solo pianist, or as a member of various
ad hoc jazz and R&B groups. He attended Birmingham's segregated Industrial High School (now known as
Parker High School), where he studied under music teacher John T. "Fess" Whatley, a demanding disciplinarian who was widely respected and whose classes produced many professional musicians. By his teens, Blount suffered from
cryptorchidism. It left him with a nearly constant discomfort that sometimes flared into severe pain.
Steingo emphasizes understanding Sun Ra's statements about his life in relation to his music. Steingo writes: "Rather than think of [Sun Ra's] music as a performance and then consider only the content of his spoken words, we might instead understand everything he did as part of the same project to listen otherwise."
New devotion to music (late 1930s) After leaving college, Blount became known as the most singularly devoted musician in Birmingham. He rarely slept, citing
Thomas Edison,
Leonardo da Vinci, and
Napoleon as fellow highly productive cat-nappers. He transformed the first floor of his family's home into a conservatory-workshop, where he wrote songs, transcribed recordings, rehearsed with the many musicians who drifted in and out, and discussed Biblical and esoteric concepts with whoever was interested. Blount became a regular at Birmingham's Forbes Piano Company, a white-owned company. Blount visited the Forbes building almost daily to play music, swap ideas with staff and customers, or copy sheet music into his notebooks. He formed a new band, and like his old teacher Whatley, insisted on rigorous daily rehearsals. The new Sonny Blount Orchestra earned a reputation as an impressive, disciplined band that could play in a wide variety of styles with equal skill.
Draft and wartime experiences In October 1942, Blount received a
selective service notification that he had been
drafted into the
Military of the United States. He quickly declared himself a
conscientious objector, citing religious objections to war and killing, his financial support of his great-aunt Ida, and his chronic hernia. The local draft board rejected his claim. In an appeal to the national draft board, Blount wrote that the lack of black men on the draft appeal board "smacks of
Hitlerism." Sonny's refusal to join the military deeply embarrassed his family, and many relatives ostracized him. He was eventually approved for alternate service at
Civilian Public Service camp in
Pennsylvania, but he did not appear at the camp as required on December 8, 1942. Shortly after, he was arrested in Alabama. In court, Blount said that alternate service was unacceptable; he debated the judge on points of law and Biblical interpretation. The judge ruled that Blount was violating the law and was at risk for being drafted into the U.S. military. Blount responded that if inducted, he would use military weapons and training to kill the first high-ranking military officer possible. The judge sentenced Blount to jail (pending draft board and CPS rulings), and then said, "I've never seen a nigger like you before." Blount replied, "No, and you never will again." In January 1943, Blount wrote to the
United States Marshals Service from the
Walker County, Alabama jail in
Jasper. He said he was facing a
nervous breakdown from the stress of imprisonment, that he was suicidal, and that he was in constant fear of sexual assault. When his conscientious objector status was reaffirmed in February 1943, he was escorted to Pennsylvania. He did forestry work as assigned during the day and was allowed to play piano at night. Psychiatrists there described him as "a
psychopathic personality [and] sexually perverted," but also as "a well-educated colored intellectual." In March 1943, the draft board reclassified Blount as
4-F because of his hernia, and he returned to Birmingham, embittered and angered. He formed a new band and soon was playing professionally. After his beloved great-aunt Ida died in 1945, Blount felt no reason to stay in Birmingham. He dissolved the band, and moved to Chicago—part of the
Second Great Migration, southern African Americans who moved north during and after
World War II.
Chicago years (1945–1961) In Chicago, Blount quickly found work, notably with blues singer
Wynonie Harris, with whom he made his recording debut on two 1946 singles,
Dig This Boogie/
Lightning Struck the Poorhouse, and ''My Baby's Barrelhouse
/Drinking By Myself
. Dig This Boogie'' was also Blount's first recorded piano solo. He performed with the locally successful
Lil Green band and played bump-and-grind music for months in
Calumet City strip clubs. In August 1946, Blount earned a lengthy engagement at the
Club DeLisa under bandleader and composer
Fletcher Henderson. Blount had long admired Henderson, but Henderson's fortunes had declined (his band was now made of up middling musicians rather than the stars of earlier years) in large part because of his instability, due to Henderson's long-term injuries from a car accident. Henderson hired Blount as pianist and arranger, replacing
Marl Young. Blount's arrangements initially showed a degree of
bebop influence, but the band members resisted the new music, despite Henderson's encouragement. In 1948, Blount performed briefly in a trio with saxophonist
Coleman Hawkins and violinist
Stuff Smith, both preeminent musicians. There are no known recordings of this trio, but home recordings of two different Blount-Smith duets from 1953 appear on
Sound Sun Pleasure!! and
Deep Purple, and one of Sun Ra's final recordings in 1992 was a rare sideman appearance on violinist
Billy Bang's
Tribute to Stuff Smith. In addition to enabling professional advancement, what he encountered in Chicago changed Blount's personal outlook. The city was a center of African-American political activism and fringe movements, with
Black Muslims,
Black Hebrews, and others
proselytizing, debating, and printing leaflets or books. Blount absorbed it all and was fascinated with the city's many
ancient Egyptian-styled buildings and monuments. He read books such as
George G.M. James's
Stolen Legacy (which argued that classical
Greek philosophy had its roots in ancient Egypt). Blount concluded that the accomplishments and history of Africans had been systematically suppressed and denied by
European cultures. By 1952, Blount was leading the Space Trio with drummer Tommy "Bugs" Hunter and saxophonist
Pat Patrick, two of the most accomplished musicians he had known. They performed regularly, and Sun Ra began writing more advanced songs. On October 20, 1952, Blount legally changed his name to Le Sony'r Ra. Sun Ra claimed to have always been uncomfortable with his birth name of Blount. He considered it a
slave name, from a family that was not his. David Martinelli suggested that his change was similar to "
Malcolm X and
Muhammad Ali... [dropping] their slave names in the process of attaining a new self-awareness and self-esteem". Patrick left the group to move to Florida with his new wife. His friend
John Gilmore (tenor sax) joined the group, and
Marshall Allen (alto sax) soon followed. Patrick was in and out of the group until the end of his life, but Allen and Gilmore were the two most devoted members of the Arkestra. In fact, Gilmore is often criticized for staying with Sun Ra for over forty years when he could have been a strong leader in his own right. Saxophonist
James Spaulding and trombonist
Julian Priester also recorded with Sun Ra in Chicago, and both went on to careers of their own. The Chicago tenor
Von Freeman also did a short stint with the band of the early 1950s. In Chicago, Sun Ra met
Alton Abraham, a precociously intelligent teenager and something of a kindred spirit. He became the Arkestra's biggest booster and one of Sun Ra's closest friends. Both men felt like outsiders and shared an interest in
esoterica. Abraham's strengths balanced Ra's shortcomings: though he was a disciplined bandleader, Sun Ra was somewhat introverted and lacked business sense (a trait that haunted his entire career). Abraham was outgoing, well-connected, and practical. Though still a teenager, Abraham eventually became Sun Ra's
de facto business manager: he booked performances, suggested musicians for the Arkestra, and introduced several popular songs into the group's repertoire. Ra, Abraham and others formed a sort of
book club to trade ideas and discuss the offbeat topics that so intrigued them. This group printed a number of pamphlets and broadsides explaining their conclusions and ideas. Some of these were collected by critic
John Corbett and Anthony Elms as ''The Wisdom of Sun Ra: Sun Ra's
Polemical Broadsheets and Streetcorner Leaflets'' (2006). In the mid-1950s, Sun Ra and Abraham formed an
independent record label that was generally known as
El Saturn Records. (It had several name variations.) Initially focused on 45 rpm singles by Sun Ra and artists related to him, Saturn Records issued two full-length albums during the 1950s:
Super-Sonic Jazz (1957) and
Jazz in Silhouette (1959). Producer
Tom Wilson was the first to release a Sun Ra album, through his independent label
Transition Records in 1957, entitled
Jazz by Sun Ra. During this era, Sun Ra recorded the first of dozens of singles as a band-for-hire backing a range of
doo wop and R&B singers; several dozen of these were reissued in a two-CD set,
The Singles, by Evidence Records. In the late 1950s, Sun Ra and his band began to wear outlandish, Egyptian-styled or science fiction-themed costumes and
headdresses. These costumes had multiple purposes: they expressed Sun Ra's fascination with ancient Egypt and the
space age, they provided a recognizable uniform for the Arkestra, they provided a new identity for the band onstage, and comic relief. (Sun Ra thought
avant garde musicians typically took themselves far too seriously.)
New York years (1961–1968) Sun Ra and the Arkestra moved to New York City in the fall of 1961. To save money, Sun Ra and his band members lived communally. This enabled Sun Ra to request rehearsals spontaneously and at any time, which was his established habit. It was during this time in New York that Sun Ra recorded the album
The Futuristic Sound of Sun Ra. and pianist
Thelonious Monk chided someone who said Sun Ra was "too far out" by responding: "Yeah, but it
swings." Also in 1966, Sun Ra, with members of the Arkestra and Al Kooper's Blues Project, recorded the album
Batman and Robin under the pseudonym, The Sensational Guitars of Dan and Dale. The album consisted primarily of instrumental variations on the
Batman Theme and public domain classical music, with an uncredited female vocalist singing the "Robin Theme."
Philadelphia years (1968) In 1968, when the New York building they were renting was put up for sale, Sun Ra and the Arkestra relocated to the
Germantown section of
Philadelphia. Sun Ra moved into a house on Morton Street that became the Arkestra's base of operations until his death. It eventually became known as the Arkestral Institute of Sun Ra. Apart from occasional complaints about the noise of rehearsals, they were soon regarded as good neighbors because of their friendliness, drug-free living, and rapport with youngsters. The saxophonist
Danny Ray Thompson owned and operated the Pharaoh's Den, a convenience store in the neighborhood. When lightning struck a tree on their street, Sun Ra took it as a good omen. James Jacson fashioned the Cosmic Infinity Drum from the scorched tree trunk. They commuted via railroad to New York for the Monday night gig at Slug's and for other engagements. Sun Ra became a fixture in Philadelphia, appearing semi-regularly on
WXPN radio, giving lectures to community groups, or visiting the city's libraries. In the mid-1970s, the Arkestra sometimes played free Saturday afternoon concerts in a Germantown park near their home. At their mid-1970s shows in Philadelphia nightclubs, someone stood at the back of the room, selling stacks of unmarked LPs in plain white sleeves, pressed from recordings of the band's live performances.
California and world tours (1968–1993) , February 27, 1992 In late 1968, Sun Ra and the Arkestra made their first tour of the US West Coast. Reactions were mixed. Some
hippies accustomed to long-form psychedelia like the
Grateful Dead were entranced and enthralled by the Arkestra, others merely bewildered. San Francisco was friendly to avant garde jazz from the early 50s and quickly welcomed Sun Ra's music. By this time, the performance included 20–30 musicians, dancers, singers,
fire-eaters, and elaborate lighting. John Burks of
Rolling Stone wrote a positive review of a
San Jose State College concert. Sun Ra was featured on the April 19, 1969, cover of
Rolling Stone magazine, which introduced his inscrutable gaze to millions. During this tour, Damon Choice, then an art student at San Jose, joined the Arkestra and became its
vibraphonist. Starting with concerts in France, Germany, and the United Kingdom in 1970, the Arkestra began to tour internationally. They played to audiences who had known his music only through records. Sun Ra continued playing in Europe almost to the end of his life. The saxophonist Danny Ray Thompson became a
de facto tour and business manager during this era, specializing in what he called "no bullshit
C.O.D.," preferring to take cash before performing or delivering records. In early 1971, Sun Ra was appointed as
artist-in-residence at
University of California, Berkeley, teaching a course called
The Black Man in the Cosmos. Few students enrolled, but his classes were often full of curious people from the surrounding community. One half-hour of each class was devoted to a lecture (complete with handouts and homework assignments), the other half-hour to an Arkestra performance or Sun Ra keyboard solo. Reading lists included the works of
Madame Blavatsky and
Henry Dumas, the
Tibetan Book of the Dead,
Alexander Hislop's
The Two Babylons,
The Book of Oahspe, and assorted volumes concerning
Egyptian hieroglyphs, African American
folklore, and other topics. In 1971, Sun Ra traveled throughout Egypt with the Arkestra at the invitation of the drummer
Salah Ragab. He returned to Egypt in 1983 and 1984, when he recorded with Ragab. Recordings made in Egypt were released as
Live in Egypt,
Nidhamu,
Sun Ra Meets Salah Ragab,
Egypt Strut and
Horizon. In 1972, San Francisco public TV station
KQED producer John Coney, producer
Jim Newman, and screenwriter Joshua Smith worked with Sun Ra to produce an 85-minute feature film, entitled
Space Is the Place, with Sun Ra's Arkestra and an ensemble of actors assembled by the production team. It was filmed in
Oakland and San Francisco. A 1975 show concert by the Arkestra in Cleveland featured an early lineup of
Devo as the opening act. On May 20, 1978, Sun Ra and the Arkestra appeared on the TV show
Saturday Night Live (S3 E20). In New York City in the fall of 1979, Sun Ra and the Arkestra played as the "house band" at the
Squat Theatre on 23rd Street, which was the performance venue of the
avant-garde Hungarian theater troupe. Janos, their manager, transformed the theater into a nightclub while most of the troupe was away that season performing in Europe.
Debbie Harry,
The Velvet Underground's
John Cale and
Nico (from
Andy Warhol's Factory days),
John Lurie and
The Lounge Lizards, and other pop and avant-garde musicians were regulars. Sun Ra was disciplined and drank only club soda at the gigs, but did not impose his strict code on his musicians. They respected his discipline and authority. Soft-spoken and charismatic, Sun Ra turned Squat Theater into a universe of big band "space" jazz backed by a floor show of sexy Jupiterettes. He directed while playing three synthesizers at the same time. In those days, "Space Is The Place" was the space at Squat. Late in his career, he opened a few concerts for the New York–based rock group
Sonic Youth. When too ill to perform and tour, Sun Ra appointed Gilmore to lead the Arkestra. Gilmore was frail from
emphysema; after his death in 1995, Allen took over leadership of the Arkestra. In late 1992, Sun Ra returned to his birth city of Birmingham to live with his older sister, Mary Jenkins, who (along with various Blount cousins) became his caretaker. In January, he was admitted to Princeton Baptist Medical Center, suffering from
congestive heart failure,
respiratory failure, strokes,
circulatory problems, and other serious maladies. He died in the hospital on May 30, 1993, and was buried at the
Elmwood Cemetery. The footstone reads "Herman Sonny Blount aka Le Sony'r Ra". ==The Arkestra==