Mostrando postagens com marcador Donald Ayler. Mostrar todas as postagens
Mostrando postagens com marcador Donald Ayler. Mostrar todas as postagens

13.9.24

ALBERT AYLER — La Cave Live, Cleveland 1966 Revisited (2022) 2CD | FLAC (tracks), lossless

Tracklist 1 :
1    Spirits Rejoice    6:23
 Composed By – Albert Ayler
2    Prophet / Ghosts / Spiritual Bells    14:21
 Composed By – Albert Ayler
3    Our Prayer / Spirits Rejoice 9:36
Composed By [Our Prayer] – Don Ayler
4    Untitled / Truth Is Marching In    15:34
 Composed By – Albert Ayler
5    Spirits    9:07
 Composed By – Albert Ayler
6    Zion Hill    12:43
 Composed By – Albert Ayler
Tracklist 2 :
1    Spirits    7:00
 Composed By – Albert Ayler
2    Spiritual Bells    3:47
 Composed By – Albert Ayler
3    Untitled (F # Tune)    9:06
 Composed By – Albert Ayler
4    Spirits Rejoice    4:33
 Composed By – Albert Ayler
5    D.C. 5:41
Composed By – Don Cherry
6    Untitled (Minor Waltz)    6:49
 Composed By – Albert Ayler
7    Our Prayer 6:30
Composed By – Don Ayler
8    Untitled (F # Tune)    15:13
 Composed By – Albert Ayler
9    Ghosts    6:17
 Composed By – Albert Ayler
Credits :
Double Bass – Mutawef A. Shaheed As Clyde Shy
Drums – Ronald Shannon Jackson
Tenor Saxophone – Albert Ayler, Frank Wright (tracks: 1-1 to 2-3)
Trumpet – Donald Ayler
Violin – Michel Samson

9.12.22

ALBERT AYLER - Holy Ghost : Rare & Unissued Recordings (1962-70) (2004) 10CD BOX | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

After listening to Revenant's massive Albert Ayler box set, Holy Ghost: Rare & Unissued Recordings (1962-70), a pair of questions assert themselves in the uneasily settling silence that follows: who was Albert Ayler, and how did he come to be? At the time of this box set's release 26 years after the Cleveland native's mysterious death -- his lifeless body was found floating in New York's East River, without a suicide note -- those questions loom larger than ever. Revenant's amazing package certainly adds weight and heft to the argument for Ayler's true place in the jazz pantheon, not only as a practitioner of free jazz but as one of the music's true innovators. Ayler may have been deeply affected by the music of Ornette Coleman, but in turn he also profoundly influenced John Coltrane's late period.

The item itself is a deeply detailed 10" by 10" black faux-onyx "spirit box," cast from a hand-carved original. Inside are ten CDs in beautifully designed, individually colored rice paper sleeves. Seven are full-length music CDs, two contain interviews, and one is packaged as a replica of a recording tape box, containing two tracks from an Army band session Ayler participated in. Loose items include a Slug's Saloon handbill, an abridged facsimile of Amiri Baraka's journal Cricket from the mid-'60s containing a piece by Ayler, a replica of the booklet Paul Haines wrote for Ayler's Spiritual Unity album, a note Ayler scrawled on hotel stationery in Europe, a rumpled photograph of the saxophonist as a boy, and a dogwood flower. Finally, there is a hardbound 209-page book. It contains a truncated version of Val Wilmer's historic chapter on Ayler from As Serious As Your Life, a new essay by Baraka, and biographical and musicological essays by Ben Young, Marc Chaloin, and Daniel Caux. In addition, there are testimonies by many collaborators, full biographical essays of all sidemen, detailed track information on the contents, and dozens of photographs.

Almost all this material has been, until now, commercially unavailable. Qualitatively, the music here varies, both artistically and mechanically. Some was taken from broadcast and tape sources that have deteriorated or were dubious to begin with, but their massive historical significance far outweighs minor fidelity problems. Chronologically organized, the adventure begins with Ayler's earliest performances in Europe fronting a thoroughly confounded rhythm section that was tied to conventional time signatures and chord changes. Ayler, seemingly oblivious, was trying out his new thing in earnest -- to the consternation of audiences and bandmates alike. How did a guy who played like this even get a gig in such a conservative jazz environment? Fumbling as this music is, it proves beyond any doubt Ayler's knowledge and mastery of the saxophone tradition from Lester Young to Sonny Rollins. Ayler's huge tone and his amazing, masterfully controlled use of both vibrato and the tenor's high register are already in evidence here. Following these, there is finally recorded evidence to support Ayler playing with Cecil Taylor in Copenhagen in 1962. This is where he met drummer Sunny Murray who, along with bassist Gary Peacock, formed the original Ayler trio. Their 1964 performances at New York's Cellar Café are documented here to stunning effect. Following these are phenomenal broadcast performances from later that year that include Don Cherry on trumpet in France.

Other discs here document Ayler's sideman duties: with pianist Burton Greene's quintet in 1966 (with Rashied Ali), a Pharoah Sanders band with Sirone and Dave Burrell, a Town Hall concert with his brother Donald's sextet that also included Sam Rivers, and a quartet with Donald, drummer Milford Graves, and bassist Richard Davis playing at John Coltrane's funeral. These live sessions have much value historically as well as musically, but are, after all, blowing sessions -- though they still display Ayler as a willing and fiery collaborator who upped the ante with his presence. Though he arrived fully formed as a soloist, his manner of trying to adapt to other players and bring them into his sphere is fascinating, frustrating, and revealing.

Ayler's own music is showcased best when leading his own quartets and quintets, and there are almost four discs' worth of performances here. Much of this music is with the classical violinist Michel Sampson and trumpeter Donald Ayler with alternating rhythm sections. Indeed, the quintet gigs here with Sampson and Donald in the front line that used marching rhythms and traditional hymns as their root may not be as compelling sonically as the Village Vanguard stuff issued by Impulse!, but they are as satisfying musically. The various rhythm sections included drummers Ronald Shannon Jackson, Allen Blairman, Muhammad Ali, Beaver Harris, and Bernard Purdie, and bassists Bill Folwell, Steve Tintweiss, Clyde Shy (Mutawef Shaheed), pianist Call Cobbs, and tenor saxophonist Frank Wright. What is clearly evident is that the only drummer with whom Ayler truly connected with, the only one who could match his manner of playing out of time and stretching it immeasurably, was Murray, who literally played around the beat while moving the music through its dislocated center.

The late music remains controversial. Recorded live in 1968 and 1970 in New York and France, it illuminates the troublesome period on Ayler's Impulse! recordings, New Grass and Music Is the Healing Force of the Universe. In performance, struggling and ill-conceived rhythm sections try to comprehend and articulate the complex patchwork of colors, motivations, and adventurous attempts at musical integration with the blues, rock, poetry, and soul Ayler was engaging instrumentally and -- with companion Mary Parks -- vocally. Ayler's own playing remains unshakable and revelatory, stunning for its ability to bring to the surface hidden melodies, timbres, and overtones and, to a degree, make them accessible. His solos, full of passion, pathos, and the otherworldly, pull everything from his musical sound world into his being and send it out again, transformed, through the horn.

Ayler is credited with the set's title, in that he once said in an interview: "Trane was the father. Pharoah was the son. I was the Holy Ghost." While it can be dismissed as hyperbole, it should also be evaluated to underscore the aforementioned questions. Unlike Coltrane and Sanders whose musical developments followed a recorded trajectory, Ayler, who apparently had very conventional beginnings as a musician, somehow arrived on the New York and European scenes already on the outside, pushing ever harder at boundaries that other people hadn't yet even perceived let alone transgressed. Who he was in relation to all those who came after him is only answered partially, and how he came to find his margin and live there remains a complete cipher. What Revenant has accomplished is to shine light into the darkened corners of myth and apocrypha; the label has added flesh-and-bone documented history to the ghost of a giant. Ayler struggled musically and personally to find and hold onto the elusive musical/spiritual balance that grace kissed him with only a few times during his lifetime -- on tape anyway. But the quest for that prize, presented here, adds immeasurably to both the legend and the achievement.
-> This comment is posted on Allmusic by Thom Jurek, follower of our blog 'O Púbis da Rosa' <-
All Tracks & Credits

7.12.22

ALBERT AYLER QUINTET - Truth Is Marching In (1966-1990) Unofficial Release | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

1    Truth Is Marching In 8'57
Written-By – Albert Ayler
2    Our Prayer 14'55
Written-By – Donald Ayler
Credits :
Bass [String] – Lewis Worrell
Percussion – Ron Jackson
Tenor Saxophone, Written-By – Albert Ayler
Trumpet – Donald Ayler
Violin – Michel Sampson

ALBERT AYLER QUINTET - Black Revolt (1966-1990) Unofficial Release | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

Tracklist :
1    Bells    18:18
2    Ghosts    23:24
Credits :
Bass [String] – Lewis Worrell
Percussion – Ron Jackson
Tenor Saxophone, Written-By – Albert Ayler
Trumpet – Donald Ayler
Violin – Michel Sampson

5.12.22

ALBERT AYLER - Live in Greenwich Village : The Complete Impulse Recordings (1998) 2CD | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

Live in Greenwich Village was Albert Ayler's first recording for Impulse, and is arguably his finest moment, not only for the label, but ever. This double-CD reissue combines both of the Village concerts -- documented only partially on previously released LPs -- recorded in 1965 and 1966 with two very different groups. The Village gigs reveal the mature Ayler whose music embodied bold contradictions: There are the sweet, childlike, singalong melodies contrasted with violent screaming peals of emotion, contrasted with the gospel and R&B shouts of jubilation, all moving into and through one another. On the 1965 date, which featured Ayler, his brother Donald on trumpet, Joel Freedman on cello, bassist Lewis Worrell, and the great Sunny Murray on drums, the sound is one of great urgency. Opening with "Holy Ghost," the Aylers come out stomping and Murray double times them to bring the bass and cello to ground level in order to anchor musical proceedings to their respective generated sounds. "Truth Is Marching In" casts a bleating, gospelized swirl against a backdrop of three- and four-note "sung" phrases that are constantly repeated, à la a carny band before kicking down all the doors and letting it rip for almost 13 minutes. On the 1967 date of the second disc, the Aylers are augmented with drummer Beaver Harris, violinist Michel Sampson, Bill Folwell and Alan Silva on basses, and trombonist George Steele on the closer, "Universal Thoughts." "For John Coltrane" opens the set with a sweltering abstraction of tonalities in the strings and horns. On "Change Has Come," the abstraction remains but the field of language is deeper, denser, more urgent. Only with "Spiritual Rebirth," which opens with a four-note theme, does one get the feeling that the band has been pacing itself for this moment, and that the concert has become an actual treatise on the emotion of "singing" as an ensemble in uncharted territories. Throughout the rest of the set, Ayler's band buoys him perfectly, following him up through every new cloud of unknowing into a sublime musical and emotional beyond which, at least on recordings, would never be realized again. This recording is what all the fuss is about when it comes to Ayler.
-> This comment is posted on Allmusic by Thom Jurek, follower of our blog 'O Púbis da Rosa' <-
Tracklist 1 :
1     Holy Ghost 7'41
Albert Ayler
2     The Truth Is Marching In 12'42
Albert Ayler
3     Our Prayer 4'45
Donald Ayler
4     Spirits Rejoice 16'22
Albert Ayler
5     Divine Peacemaker 12'37
Albert Ayler
6     Angels 9'53
Albert Ayler
Tracklist 2 :
1     For John Coltrane 13'40
Albert Ayler
2     Change Has Come 6'24
Albert Ayler
3    Light in Darkness 10'59
Albert Ayler
4     Heavenly Home 8'51
Albert Ayler
5     Spiritual Rebirth 4'26
Albert Ayler
6     Infinite Spirit 6'37
Albert Ayler
7     Omega Is the Alpha 10'46
Albert Ayler
8     Universal Thoughts 8'22
Albert Ayler
Credits :    
Bass – Alan Silva (tracks: 2-1 to 2-8), Bill Folwell (tracks: 1-2 to 1-5, 2-1 to 2-8), Henry Grimes (tracks: 1-2 to 1-5)
Cello – Joel Freedman (tracks: 1-1, 2-1 to 2-8)
Drums – Beaver Harris (tracks: 1-2 to 1-5, 2-2 to 2-8)
Tenor Saxophone, Alto Saxophone – Albert Ayler
Trumpet – Don Ayler (tracks: 1-1 to 1-5, 2-2 to 2-8)
Violin – Michel Sampson (tracks: 1-2 to 1-5, 2-1 to 2-8)

ALBERT AYLER - Bells + Prophecy (1998) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

Combining two of his best ESP recordings on one CD, the 1998 compilation of 1965's Bells and 1964's Prophecy is the tenor saxophonist at the peak of his powers. Bells, originally released as an idiosyncratic one-sided LP, is a live set featuring Albert Ayler, his trumpeter brother Donald Ayler (this was their first recording together), alto saxophonist and ESP labelmate Charles Tyler, bassist Lewis Worrell, and drummer Sunny Murray, recorded live at New York's Town Hall. Although banded as a single track (and confusingly given the same title as an unrelated Ayler composition), Bells actually consists of a 20-minute medley of three Ayler compositions, the incantatory "Spiritual Bells," "Holy Ghost," and the brief coda "No Name," with the middle piece the primary focus. The playing is positively ferocious, with all three reed and horn players swinging from wild solos to some even more out ensemble playing. In comparison, the trio date Prophecy sounds almost normal. The four tracks (plus a second variation of Ayler's early signature piece, "Ghosts") are, oddly, the same that appeared on Ayler's ESP debut, Spiritual Unity. (Prophecy was, in fact, recorded a month prior to Spiritual Unity, although it came out much later.) Though both albums were recorded with the same sidemen, bassist Gary Peacock and drummer Sunny Murray, Ayler's relentlessly questing solo style means that these performances differ greatly from the previous album, so thoroughly that other than the initial themes, they might as well be completely different songs. Stewart Mason  
Tracklist :
1    Bells    19:55
2    Ghosts (First Variation)    11:21
3    Wizard    8:21
4    Spirits    7:55
5    Prophecy    7:12
6    Ghosts (Second Variation)    7:06
Credits :
Alto Saxophone – Charles Tyler (pistas: 1)
Bass – Gary Peacock (pistas: 2 to 6), Lewis Worrell (pistas: 1)
Drums, Percussion – Sunny Murray
Tenor Saxophone, Composed By – Albert Ayler
Trumpet – Donald Ayler (pistas: 1)

ALBERT AYLER – Stockholm, Berlin 1966 (2011) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

Stockholm, November 10, 1966
1    Truth Is Marching In    9:15
Composed By Albert Ayler
2    Omega (Is The Alpha)    10:36
Composed By Albert Ayler
3    Our Prayer - Bells 7:51
Composed By [Our Prayer] – Donald Ayler
4    Infinite Spirit - Japan 3:53
Composed By [Japan] – Pharoah Sanders
Berlin, November 3, 1966    
5    Truth Is Marching In    7:25
Composed By Albert Ayler
6    Omega (Is The Alpha)    3:36
Composed By Albert Ayler
7    Our Prayer - Truth Is Marching In 5:06
Composed By [Our Prayer] – Donald Ayler
8    Ghosts - Bells    11:29
Composed By Albert Ayler
Credits :
Double Bass – William Folwell
Drums – Beaver Harris
Tenor Saxophone – Albert Ayler
Trumpet – Donald Ayler
Violin – Michel Samson

3.12.22

ALBERT AYLER - Live In Europe 1964-1966 (1991) Unofficial Release | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

Tracklist :
1    Mothers    7:36
 Composed By – Albert Ayler
2    Children    8:04
 Composed By – Albert Ayler
3    Holy Spirits    8:03
 Composed By – Albert Ayler
4    Our Prayer    4:24
 Composed By – Donald Ayler
5    Ghosts - Bells    11:11
 Composed By – Albert Ayler
6    Truth Is Marching In    7:06
 Composed By – Albert Ayler
7    Omega    3:40
 Composed By – Albert Ayler
Credits :
Bass – Bill Folwell (pistas: 4 to 7), Gary Peacock (pistas: 1 to 3)
Drums – Beaver Harris (pistas: 4 to 7), Sunny Murray (pistas: 1 to 3)
Tenor Saxophone [Tenor Sax] – Albert Ayler
Trumpet – Don Cherry (pistas: 1 to 3), Donald Ayler (pistas: 4 to 7)
Violin – Michael Sampson (pistas: 4 to 7)
Notas.
Tracks 1-3: Recorded live at Montmartre Jazzhus, Copenhagen (Denmark) on November 5, 1964
Tracks 4-7: Recorded live at Berlin Jazz Festival, Berlin (Germany) on November 3, 1966
However, tracks 1-3 were in fact recorded on September 3, 1964 (subsequently released as part of The Copenhagen Tapes).

2.12.22

ALBERT AYLER - Spirits Rejoice (1965) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

Recorded live at New York's Judson Hall in 1965, Spirits Rejoice is one of Albert Ayler's wildest, noisiest albums, partly because it's one of the very few that teams him with another saxophonist, altoist Charles Tyler. It's also one of the earliest recordings to feature Ayler's brother Don playing an amateurish but expressive trumpet, and the ensemble is further expanded by using bassists Henry Grimes and Gary Peacock together on three of the five tracks; plus, the rubato "Angels" finds Ayler interacting with Call Cobbs' harpsichord in an odd, twinkling evocation of the spiritual spheres. Aside from that more spacious reflection, most of the album is given over to furious ensemble interaction and hard-blowing solos that always place in-the-moment passion above standard jazz technique. Freed up by the presence of the trumpet and alto, Ayler's playing concentrates on the rich lower register of his horn and all the honks and growls that go with it; his already thick, huge tone has rarely seemed more monolithic. Spirits Rejoice also provides an opportunity to hear the sources of Ayler's simple, traditional melodies becoming more eclectic. The nearly 12-minute title track has a pronounced New Orleans marching band feel, switching between two themes reminiscent of a hymn and a hunting bugle call, and the brief "Holy Family" is downright R&B-flavored. "Prophet" touches on a different side of Ayler's old-time march influence, with machine-gun cracks and militaristic cadences from drummer Sunny Murray driving the raggedly energetic ensemble themes. For all its apparent chaos, Spirits Rejoice is often surprisingly pre-arranged -- witness all the careening harmony passages that accompany the theme statements, and the seamless transitions of the title track. Spirits Rejoice is proof that there was an underlying logic even to Ayler's most extreme moments, and that's why it remains a tremendously inspiring recording. Steve Huey  
Tracklist :
1     Spirits Rejoice 11'41
Albert Ayler
2     Holy Family 2'11
Albert Ayler
3     D. C. 8'00
Albert Ayler
4     Angels 5'30
Albert Ayler
5     Prophet 5'36
Albert Ayler
Credits :
Alto Saxophone – Charles Tyler
Bass – Gary Peacock, Henry Grimes
Drums – Sunny Murray
Tenor Saxophone – Albert Ayler
Trumpet – Don Ayler

ALBERT AYLER - Bells (1965-2000) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

Albert Ayler's short but definitive album Bells covers about 20 minutes of music from his legendary Town Hall/N.Y.C. concert on May Day of 1965. It is not surprising to hear the angst and anguish in their music, considering it was made about five weeks after Black nationalist leader Malcolm X was assassinated. Ayler and his quintet blow their own horns in alert of the "new thing" in jazz coming on strong, with no apologies as to its fierce intent or audacious stance. Brother/trumpeter Donald Ayler and alto saxophonist Charles Tyler join with the tenor saxophonist in a united front of sound and steel forged reserve in making free jazz a reality. The back cover has a reprint of Dan Morgenstern's Down Beat Magazine review of the performance, which is insightful, fair, accurate, and to the point, a good read for anyone who might dismiss Ayler's concept as something other than serious. The first of the two spontaneous compositions contains an outburst by the whole ensemble, followed by trumpet and tenor sax solos that bend notes and shapes in the extreme abstract. A free bop-based mid-section shows recording flaws, as drummer Sunny Murray and bassist Lewis Worrell are barely audible. Tyler's alto is drenched in the loud and abrasive tone the Ayler's dictated, but shows he has his own voice. The overtone-soaked music is tempered by a low-level bass solo from Worrell, with Murray's spare, splashy cymbal inserts, ending with a bouncy but eventual whirling dervish coda. The second, much longer improvisation, is based on Ayler's "Holy Ghost" theme, as a soulful, singing, vibrato-driven Ayler ignites Worrell via Murray's signature triple and quadruple flam accents. There's a clarion march theme repeated before and after congealed chaos, followed by deconstructed but distinct melodies, albeit brave and uncompromising. When all three of these horn players blow hard and strong together, it brings to mind Amiri Baraka's comment about "a terrible wholeness," as this purposefully saturated music stands alone as the most singularly unique early creative statement in modern music. As Albert Ayler recorded several definitive recordings before or after this one, and due to the very short length of Bells, it cannot be considered a magnum opus. But it does contain music played by his most powerful unit, a small window into the mind and heart of the most iconic maverick in the free jazz movement, and a magnet for discussion that lingers on well past his death. Michael G. Nastos  
Tracklist :
1     Bells 20'03
Albert Ayler
Credits :
Bass – Lewis Worrell
Percussion – Sonny Murray
Saxophone [Sax] – Albert Ayler, Charles Tyler
Trumpet – Donald Ayler

ALBERT AYLER - At Slug's Saloon, Vol. 1 & 2 (2005) 2CD | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

The Slug's Saloon dates are among the recordings that established Albert Ayler's reputation as the iconoclastic legend he was. This May Day performance featured Albert on tenor saxophone, brother Donald on trumpet, Lewis Worrell on bass, Michael Sampson on violin, and a very young Ronald Shannon Jackson on drums. While the recording quality may not be up to some modern-day stereo fascist's standards, there's plenty of fidelity here for most listeners. This is Ayler at his most beguiling and powerful. The set opens with "Truth Is Marching In," which begins with the refrain line from "The Battle Hymn of the Republic" and turns it inside out into a gospel chant before Ayler just turns his saxophone on the audience like he's some Old Testament prophet, screaming and screeching through the middle as Jackson sticks with him every step of the way, triple timing his bull-roaring wail. The theme is one note played in various cadences; each member begins his solo in turn and soon the entire process of music-making has been reversed -- speaking in tongues has been realized, although everyone on the bandstand and in the audience realizes what's happening. Next up is Donald Ayler's "Our Prayer," which begins with a beer polka theme crossed with a carnival song and turns into marching band music, before becoming unglued in an atonal fury of pure gospel shouting and blues hollering to the heavens. Vol. 1 (the stronger of the two) closes with the truly astonishing "Bells." It's true that Ayler only had a few compositions to his name, but it didn't matter since they were all so open they could be reinterpreted a thousand ways. "Bells" is Ayler's masterpiece, beginning with a mournful violin line that's doubled by Donald and then harmonically amended by Worrell and Albert. This is an offering, a funeral march about to happen. The end of the world has already come and the dead are being mourned. The one phrase is repeated over and again, changed little by little, until at five minutes it is a song of joy. And at nine minutes it's a free jazz blowout that is so thunderous there are dropouts in the mikes. By 16 minutes the cover has melted from your skull and the sun is shining from within and without and you have been transformed forever. Yeah, you need this that bad...what are you waiting for?
-> This comment is posted on Allmusic by Thom Jurek, follower of our blog 'O Púbis da Rosa' <-
Tracklist Disc 1 :
1    Truth Is Marching In    10:10
2    Our Prayer    12:19
3    Bells    18:00

The second of two CDs from the Albert Ayler Quintet's engagement at Slug's on May 1, 1966 has long versions of "Ghosts" (over 23 minutes) and "Initiation" performed by the tenor/leader/ trumpeter Donald Ayler, violinist Michel Sampson, bassist Lewis Worrell, and drummer Ronald Shannon Jackson. The music is both futuristic (with extroverted emotions expressed in free improvisations) and ancient (New Orleans marching band rhythms, group riffing, and folkish melodies). Although Vol. 1 gets the edge, most avant-garde collectors will want both releases. Scott Yanow
Tracklist Disc 2 :
1    Ghosts    23:08
2    Initiation    16:32
Credits :    
Double Bass [String] – Lewis Worrell
Percussion – Ron Jackson
Tenor Saxophone – Albert Ayler
Trumpet – Donald Ayler
Violin – Michel Samson


ALBERT AYLER - Lörrach, Paris 1966 (1966-2002) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

The two concerts presented on this disc represent two of the finest dates of Albert Ayler's European tour of 1966. The band -- with brother, Don, on trumpet, violinist Michael Sampson, drummer Beaver Harris, and bassist William Folwell -- was in fantastic shape and performed beyond expectation on both evenings. What is most noticeable about these dates and how they fill in a part of the Ayler mystique as a performer was to hear how immediately he would dictate a marching rhythm, theme, or folk song melody, or even perhaps a child ballad. It was important to acknowledge, right from the beginning in these tunes for a European audience, where this music came from and what continuum he was part of. The opener is "Bells," and for the longest time a Sousa marching rhythm precedes an eight-note melody. Like Ornette Coleman, he uses Sampson's violin and Donald's trumpet to move that melody through the modulation of the rhythm section before taking off into something else, someplace where the saxophone can become a real and true extension of the human voice. The squealing and honking and wailing all become part of a choir of voices forgotten by history, yet inextricably tied to it as ciphers and ghosts. The theme of "Bells" and those of "Our Prayer," "Ghost," "Holy Ghost," and "Spirits" all come from the entryway of emotional clarity and parade churchlike through the band, transferring themselves out onto an audience that must have been staring in disbelief. The shock is how well Ayler moves through his harmonic inventions and involves the band without regard for their involvement. He knows they are there; that's enough, and so he speaks freely. His timbral modulations carry emotions directly from the heart through the horn onto the band, who fills them and sends them out, whether tenderly or terrifyingly, onto those in the seats. This is an amazing document, like the Hilversum sessions but better, because the sound is respectable here and matches the grandeur and shocking emotional immediacy of the performances.
-> This comment is posted on Allmusic by Thom Jurek, follower of our blog 'O Púbis da Rosa' <-
Tracklist :
1     Bells 13'30
Albert Ayler
2     Prophet 7'00
Albert Ayler
3     Our Prayer/Spirits Rejoice 6'25
Albert Ayler / Donald Ayler
4     Ghosts 3'26
Albert Ayler
5     Truth Is Marching In 11'24
Albert Ayler
6     Ghosts 7'43
Albert Ayler
7     Spiritual Rebirth/Light in Darkness/Infinite Spirit 11'05
Albert Ayler
8     All/Our Prayer/Holy Family 4'45
Albert Ayler / Donald Ayler
Credits :    
Bass – William Folwell
Drums – Beaver Harris
Tenor Saxophone – Albert Ayler
Trumpet – Don Ayler
Violin – Michel Sampson

30.11.22

ALBERT AYLER - Love Cry (1968-1991) RM | GRP Presents The Legendary Masters Of Jazz | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

From the time he was signed to Impulse in 1966, it was assumed that Albert Ayler's releases on that label would be motivated by an attempt at commercialism. While the music was toned down from his earlier ESP recordings, by no means did Ayler ever make commercial records. Much in the same way John Coltrane's later-period Impulse releases weren't commercial, Ayler simply took advantage of a larger record company's distribution, trying to expose the music to more people. Ayler's uncompromising musical freedom mixed with his catchy combination of nursery rhythms and brass band marches remained prominent on Love Cry. The interplay between the Ayler brothers also remained fiery as younger sibling Donald is heard playing trumpet for the last time on a recording with his brother. Donald was fired from the band (at the suggestion of Impulse) and, unfortunately, was committed to a mental institution for a short stay after these sessions were made. The rhythm section of Alan Silva on bass and Milford Graves on drums continually instigates and propels this music into furious militaristic march territory. Unhappily, the four tracks in which Call Cobbs is featured on harpsichord tend to drag the music down; it's unfortunate his gospel-inspired piano or organ playing couldn't have been utilized instead. Al Campbell  
Tracklist :
1     Love Cry 3'55
Albert Ayler
2     Ghosts 2'49
Albert Ayler
3     Omega 3'19
Albert Ayler
4     Dancing Flowers 2'24
Albert Ayler
5     Bells 3'09
Albert Ayler
6     Love Flower 3'32
Albert Ayler
7     Love Cry II (Previously Unissued) 7'15
Albert Ayler
8     Zion Hill (Alternate Take) 4'14
Albert Ayler
9     Universal Indians (Alternate Take) 7'36
Albert Ayler
10     Zion Hill 6'08
Albert Ayler
11     Universal Indians (Previously Unissued Full Length Version) 9'50
Albert Ayler
Credits :
Alto Saxophone – Albert Ayler (pistas: 1, 10)
Bass – Alan Silva
Drums – Milford Graves
Harpsichord – Call Cobbs (pistas: 3, 4, 6, 8, 10)
Tenor Saxophone – Albert Ayler
Trumpet – Donald Ayler (pistas: 1 to 3, 5, 7, 9, 11)
Vocals – Albert Ayler (pistas: 1, 9, 11)

ALBERT AYLER - In Greenwich Village (1967-1987) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

During 1967-69 avant-garde innovator Albert Ayler recorded a series of albums for Impulse that started on a high level and gradually declined in quality. This LP, Ayler's first Impulse set, was probably his best for that label. There are two selections apiece from a pair of live appearances with Ayler having a rare outing on alto on the emotional "For John Coltrane" and the more violent "Change Has Come" while backed by cellist Joel Friedman, both Alan Silva and Bill Folwell on basses and drummer Beaver Harris. The other set (with trumpeter Donald Ayler, violinist Michel Sampson, Folwell and Henry Grimes on basses and Harris) has a strong contrast between the simple childlike melodies and the intense solos. However this LP (which was augmented later on by the two-LP set The Village Concerts) will be difficult to find. Scott Yanow
Tracklist :
1     For John Coltrane 13'38
Albert Ayler
2     Change Has Come 6'24
Albert Ayler
3     Truth Is Marching In 12'43
Albert Ayler
4     Our Prayer 4'43
Donald Ayler
Credits :    
Alto Saxophone – Albert Ayler (tracks: 1)
Bass – Alan Silva (tracks: 1, 2), Bill Folwell, Henry Grimes (tracks: 3, 4)
Cello – Joel Friedman (tracks: 1, 2)
Drums – Beaver Harris
Producer – Bob Thiele
Tenor Saxophone – Albert Ayler (tracks: 2 to 4)
Trumpet – Donald Ayler (tracks: 3, 4)
 Violin – Michel Sampson (tracks: 3, 4)

ESBJÖRN SVENSSON TRIO — Winter In Venice (1997) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

Esbjörn Svensson has stood not only once on stage in Montreux. He was already a guest in the summer of 1998 at the jazz festival on Lake Gen...