DKT/MC5 & The Sun Ra Arkestra in Los Angeles

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feetsies
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Location: los angeles

DKT/MC5 & The Sun Ra Arkestra in Los Angeles

Post by feetsies »

http://www.uclalive.org/event.asp?Event_ID=307:
DKT/MC5 & The Sun Ra Arkestra
Barbez opens
With special guests
Gilby Clarke (Guns N' Roses)
Greg Dulli (Afghan Whigs, The Twilight Singers)
Buzzy Jones
Lisa Kekaula (The BellRays, Basement Jaxx)
Handsome Dick Manitoba (Dictators)
Dr. Charles Moore
Phil Ranelin

“They rip the 100 Club to shreds with a force 50 gale of everything you love about rock ‘n’ roll.”
— NME

Detroit’s rock ‘n’ roll bad boys MC5 (Motor City Five) “kicked out the jams” in 1969 as a brisk antidote to the flower power pop of the era, laying the groundwork for punk rock and grunge with their lacerating guitars, propulsive drive and howling vocals. Revered by generations of rockers, from Rage Against the Machine to the Hives to the White Stripes, the band’s musical legacy is more powerful than ever. One of MC5’s early gigs was opening for The Sun Ra Arkestra, and member Wayne Kramer said “no other band affected me the way Sun Ra and his Arkestra has. They opened the door to the New Music.” The late Sun Ra, who claimed he was from Saturn and dressed his Arkestra like Ancient Egyptians, was a pioneer of avant-garde jazz, incorporating world rhythms and electric instrumentation. MC5’s surviving members, Michael Davis, Kramer and Dennis Thompson (DKT) reunite after four decades in this visionary event.
I never saw a wild thing sorry for itself.
A small bird will drop frozen dead from a bough without ever having felt sorry for itself.
-D. H. Lawrence
anorthernsoul
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Post by anorthernsoul »

Lisa Kekaula (The BellRays, Basement Jaxx)
she's great
Handsome Dick Manitoba (Dictators)
he's awful. he's like a wrestler bombing around stage, doing all the dumb stuff like call me animal.

sun ra are incredible though, it's the most flailing, chanting, squeaking and grating stuff.
feetsies
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Location: los angeles

Post by feetsies »

They already played London in March. I bet Jase was there :wink:

http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=16741:
Sun Ra Arkestra + DKT/MC5 in London
Posted: 2005-03-03

By Rob Witts



Royal Festival Hall, London UK 25 February 2005

The Sun Ra Arkestra take the stage in glittering costumes and outlandish headgear, looking like the house band at a particularly wild Star Trek convention and sounding like nothing else on earth - or indeed on Saturn. Since Sun Ra's death in 1993, the patented mixture of swampy big-band and riotous free jazz has been presided over by saxophonist Marhall Allen, who launches tonight's proceedings with a squealing solo. Taken as a big band they sound great, with the same barely-controlled energy of old; what is missing tonight is the sudden, surreal switches into free improvisation that take that energy to another level. There is the sense that anything could happen, but it too rarely does.



Afro-futurist free jazz first met agit-rock in 1968, when Sun Ra's outfit played a series of double-bills with the MC5 that have passed into counter-cultural legend. There was mutual admiration between the two bands, and a shared tendency towards anarchy. With the surviving members of MC5 touring again, it must have seemed a good idea on paper to recreate those concerts; in practice, it makes for a very strange event, and not in a good way. The bands are no longer connected by a zeitgeist, and music history has favoured hard rock over free jazz, which is reflected in tonight's audience, who are mainly here to see the jams kicked out one more time. Most don't bother to come to the first half, leaving the hall half empty and subdued.

DKT/MC5 play it straight and loud, the three original members propped up by guitarist Gilbey Clarke. Vocal duties are shared between Basement Jaxx powerhouse Lisa Kekaula, resplendent in foot-high afro, and Dictators frontman Handsome Dick Manitoba, who struts and bounces around the stage like a grizzled punk energizer bunny. The band sounds great, the songs are still good, but it sounds less like a radical musical force than the soundtrack to a car commercial.

And then, at the end, something does happen. The Arkestra are invited back on stage, joined by vocalist David Thomas, for a free-form rendition of "Starship". Everyone plays flat out, generating furious noise and energy in a rambunctious free jazz blow-out. It's not refined or pretty, but it's thrilling; briefly, the spirit of '68 lives.
I never saw a wild thing sorry for itself.
A small bird will drop frozen dead from a bough without ever having felt sorry for itself.
-D. H. Lawrence
simonkeeping
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Post by simonkeeping »

I went to that, Starship was amazing. So fucked up it was genius. Best thing they did all night by a long way.
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