Bad and Beautiful

Bad and Beautiful
Studio album by
Sun Ra and his Arkestra
Released1972 [1]
Recorded1961 New York
GenreJazz
Length30:57
LabelSaturn
Impulse!
Evidence
ProducerAlton Abraham
Sun Ra and his Arkestra chronology
The Futuristic Sounds of Sun Ra
(1961)
Bad and Beautiful
(1972)
Art Forms of Dimensions Tomorrow
(1965)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[2]
The Encyclopedia of Popular Music[3]

Bad and Beautiful is an album by the American jazz musician Sun Ra and his Arkestra. Recorded in 1961 in New York City at the Choreographers' Workshop, 414 W. 51st St., the album was the second to be recorded in New York by the Arkestra after leaving Chicago, but would remain unreleased until 1972. The album is considered to represent an important transition between the big band approach of the Chicago recordings, and the more 'outside' approach of Ra's smaller bands recorded later in the decade:

'Aside from "Exotic Two," the tunes are split between standards (apparently the last ones the group would record until the '70s) and blues originals, but there are indications of the direction the Arkestra would take throughout the '60s. "Search Light Blues" has some interesting percussion accents finding their way into the arrangement, and "Exotic Two" alludes more clearly to the percussion-heavy sound that dominated many of the '60s recordings. Sun Ra plays piano exclusively on this recording, and Gilmore gets lots of room to shine. A significant transitional LP, this is probably the last "inside" record the Arkestra would record as they forged new sonic paths into the mid-'60s.' Sean Westergaard, All Music Guide link

According to Ra's biographer, John F Szwed, the album announced that Ra was 'now in New York',[4] with its inclusion of the theme music from the film The Bad and the Beautiful, and its Broadway show tunes And This Is My Beloved and Just In Time.

The record has been re-released by Impulse! in 1974, and again by Evidence in 1992, this time on a Compact Disc coupled with We Travel The Space Ways.

  1. ^ Cite error: The named reference campbell was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  2. ^ AllMusic review
  3. ^ Larkin, Colin (2006). The Encyclopedia of Popular Music. Vol. 7. MUZE. p. 843.
  4. ^ Space is the Place, John Szwed, Mojo, 2000. p187