Holy Ghost is the first extended study of free jazz saxophonist Albert
Ayler, who is seen today as one of the most important innovators in the
history of jazz. Ayler synthesized children s songs, La Marseillaise,
American march music, and gospel hymns, turning them into powerful,
rambunctious, squalling free-jazz improvisations. Some critics
considered him a charlatan, others a heretic for unhinging the
traditions of jazz.
Some simply considered him insane. However,
like most geniuses, Ayler was misunderstood in his time. His divine
messages of peace and love, apocalyptic visions of flying saucers, and
the strange account of the days leading up to his being found floating
in New York s East River are central to his mystique, but, as Koloda
points out, they are a distraction, overshadowing his profound impact on
the direction of jazz as one of the most visible avant-garde players of
the 1960s and a major influence on others, including John Coltrane.
A musicologist, and friend of Don Ayler, Albert s troubled
trumpet-playing brother, Richard Koloda has spent over two decades
researching this book. He follows Ayler from his beginnings in his
native Cleveland to France, where he received his greatest acclaim, to
his untimely death on November 25, 1970, at age thirty-four, and puts to
rest speculation concerning his mysterious death. A feat of biography
and a major addition to jazz scholarship, Holy Ghost offers a new
appreciation of one of the most important and controversial figures in
the twentieth-century music.
Holy Ghost : The Life And Death Of Free Jazz Pioneer Albert Ayler - Richard Koloda
- Product Code:New
- Availability:In Stock
-
£12.00