Featuring Pharoah Sanders & Black Harold - Personnel and Recording Details

Personnel and Recording Details

  • Pharoah Sanders - Sax (Tenor);
  • Black Harold - flute;
  • Sun Ra - Piano, electric celeste;
  • Al Evans - trumpet, flugelhorn;
  • Chris Capers - trumpet;
  • Teddy Nance - trombone;
  • Bernard Pettaway - trombone
  • Robert Northern - French horn;
  • Marshall Allen - alto sax, flute;
  • Danny Davis - alto sax, flute;
  • Robert Cummings - bass clarinet;
  • Pat Patrick - baritone sax;
  • Alan Silva - bass, cello;
  • Clifford Jarvis - drums;
  • Art Jenkins- space voice

Catalogue Number: Saturn IHNY 165. Recorded live at the Cellar Cafe, New York 15/6/64, by Paul Haines (just before the 'October revolution in jazz', which took place at the Cellar Cafe in October of that year, and in which both Haines and Sun Ra were involved). Date and location details supplied by Ahmed Abdullah in an interview on WKCR (1965 and 1968 are often incorrectly mentioned in discographies).

The ESP Disk reissue (ESP 4054) gives the recording date as December 31, 1964 at Judson Hall, New York.

Read more about this topic:  Featuring Pharoah Sanders & Black Harold

Famous quotes containing the words personnel, recording and/or details:

    This woman is headstrong, obstinate and dangerously self- opinionated.
    —Report by Personnel Officer at I.C.I., rejecting Mrs. Thatcher for a job in 1948.

    He shall not die, by G—, cried my uncle Toby.
    MThe ACCUSING SPIRIT which flew up to heaven’s chancery with the oath, blush’d as he gave it in;—and the RECORDING ANGEL as he wrote it down, dropp’d a tear upon the word, and blotted it out for ever.
    Laurence Sterne (1713–1768)

    Working women today are trying to achieve in the work world what men have achieved all along—but men have always had the help of a woman at home who took care of all the other details of living! Today the working woman is also that woman at home, and without support services in the workplace and a respect for the work women do within and outside the home, the attempt to do both is taking its toll—on women, on men, and on our children.
    Jeanne Elium (20th century)