TRANSCRIPT
(old timey jovial music) - Sun Ra was one of the first Black artists to own his own record label, Saturn Records, with his partner Alton Abraham.
(jazz music) - [Narrator] How do you decide what's going to come out on Saturn Records?
- [Sun Ra] Whatever I think people are not gonna listen to, I always recorded it, (speaker laughs) where it would take them some time to maybe 20 years, 30 years, before they really hear it.
(jazz music) - You had different jazz musicians that were releasing music independently.
Max Roach and Charles Mingus had a label together, but I think Sun Ra might have been the most robust example because he did it for so long.
It's everything from swing to bebop to progressive to music that doesn't even really sound like music.
(gong rings) It's a lot of music to go through, so a lot of Sun Ra's fans that I know personally, I don't even think they've gotten through the whole catalog themselves.
- He is both a dream and like, this headache for record collectors.
(jazz music) - When an artist decides to make their own records for themselves and own the work, own the masters, that is, it's a breakthrough moment.
It's a rejection of the system, of the plantation system that is the recording industry, plain and simple.
(jazz music) (jazz music)