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Jesus
Acedo is the quixotic leader of Black Sun Ensemble who, on the basis
of his enigmatic recordings, has been hailed by critics as one of the
most innovative guitarists of our time.
Born on Christmas Eve, 1962 in Tucson, Arizona, to Mexican immigrant
parents, Acedo was one of eight children, the only one with an
interest in music. After the death of his father in 1975, Acedo
grieved by immersing himself in music. He spent most of his early
adolescence at the Tucson public library listening to Ravi Shankar and
Led Zeppelin records. At this time, Acedo bought a guitar. In high
school, he began experimenting with the unique tunings of his guitar
that give his music what one reviewer reverently called
"peculiarly mystical, twangy, meditative, Middle Eastern rock
sound". Muze, in describing his style, said he can "spit
blasts of dragon fire or conjure the exotic, iridescent mystique of
peacock feathers with a single stroke."
A self-titled debut album was released by Tucson's Pyknotic Records in
1985. Its extraordinary qualities led Acedo to sign a five-year
contract with England's Reckless Records, and in 1988 the label
released "Black Sun Ensemble" (1988), "Lambent
Flame" (1989) and "Elemental Forces" (1991). These
records were a critical and commercial success. At the time, Offbeat
exclaimed that BSE was "possibly, the world's coolest band."
After touring the West Coast with Camper Van Beethoven in support of
"Lambent Flame" the Ensemble was captured live on the first
side of "Tragic Magic" (1992) for Rough Trade. The second
side was a magical suite of mostly acoustic pieces that presaged the
extensive title track of the later "Sky
Pilot" CD.
The inexorable weight of personnel changes, drugs and unexpected
success eventually unbalanced Acedo's mental stability. He was
diagnosed with schizophrenia in 1992 and spent the next two years in
and out of local hospitals. During his breakdown, the band recorded
the ill-fated "Psycho Master El" album for Tucson's San Jacinto
Records (1994). This record was remixed and remastered
in 1998 for Camera Obscura Records. The results were issued as "Sky
Pilot" in 1999, which also included rare Black Sun singles
tracks and a brand new 20-minute work called "Sky Pilot
Suite". "Sky Pilot" got rave reviews by critics and sold well
locally and internationally. The Ensemble began playing regular gigs,
impressing a whole new generation of listeners. News of Black Sun's
return to the stage was appreciated by grunge-rock legend Mark Arm of
Mudhoney, who engineered a shared performance at Tucson's Club
Congress in early 2001. In February 2001, Camera Obscura reissued the debut
Black Sun Ensemble recording from 1985, again to extraordinary
reviews.
On the wave of recent success, Acedo has brought himself back from
madness, poverty and potential obscurity. He is now recapturing his
old fire by re-inventing himself, and is working to re-establish his
rightful place as one of the key guitarists of our time. This was
reinforced by the 2002 CD "Hymn of the
Master", and even more so by the 2003 CD "Starlight".
BSE continue to be a hit at annual SXSW festivals and have complete a
new album, "Bolt of Apollo" for release
on Camera Obscura in the second half of 2006.
Other Resources:
Notes
on CAM033CD - "Sky Pilot"
Notes
on CAM040CD - "S/T (First LP Reissue)"
Notes
on CAM048CD - "Hymn of the Master"
Notes
on CAM059CD - "Starlight" CD
Notes
on CAM077CD - "Bolt of Apollo"
Check
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