Holy Ghost: The Life And Death Of Free Jazz Pioneer Albert Ayler
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 twentieth-century music.

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Holy Ghost: The Life And Death Of Free Jazz Pioneer Albert Ayler
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 twentieth-century music.

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Holy Ghost: The Life And Death Of Free Jazz Pioneer Albert Ayler

Holy Ghost: The Life And Death Of Free Jazz Pioneer Albert Ayler

by Richard Koloda
Holy Ghost: The Life And Death Of Free Jazz Pioneer Albert Ayler

Holy Ghost: The Life And Death Of Free Jazz Pioneer Albert Ayler

by Richard Koloda

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$24.95 
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Overview

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 twentieth-century music.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781911036937
Publisher: Outline Press, Limited
Publication date: 11/15/2022
Pages: 304
Sales rank: 641,596
Product dimensions: 5.90(w) x 8.40(h) x 0.90(d)

About the Author

Richard Koloda has a master’s degree in Musicology from Cleveland State University(having written a thesis on the piano music of Frederic Rzewski). He was a contributor to the critically acclaimed documentary My Name Is Albert Ayler by Swedish filmmaker Kasper Collin and was a consultant on Revenant Records’ ten-CD retrospective of Ayler, which has been called 'the Sistine Chapel of box sets'. Richard lives in Wayland, Ohio, where he practices law. When he is not in court, he is working on his second book (not about music).

Table of Contents

Preface 4

Chapter I Youth 9

Chapter II The Army 19

Chapter III Scandinavia 32

Chapter IV My Name Is Albert Ayler 45

Chapter V Back to the USA 52

Chapter VI Spirits 62

Chapter VII Swing Low, Sweet Spiritual 73

Chapter VIII Prophecy 78

Chapter IX Spiritual Unity 88

Chapter X New York Eye and Ear Control 99

Chapter XI Ghosts 104

Chapter XII C'Est La Belle Epoque 121

Chapter XIII Bells 136

Chapter XIV Spirits Rejoice 144

Chapter XV La Cave 155

Chapter XVI Slugs 168

Chapter XVII European Tour 179

Chapter XVIII Back to the Village 195

Chapter XIX Beginning of the End? 222

Chapter XX France 1970 243

Chapter XXI 'Another Afro Sound-Gone' 251

Postscript 266

Acknowledgements 273

Bibliography 274

Endnotes 293

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