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Spiritual Unity

Spiritual Unity is a studio album by American free jazz saxophonist Albert Ayler. It was recorded on July 10, 1964 in New York City, and features bassist Gary Peacock and drummer Sunny Murray. It was the first album recorded for Bernard Stollman's ESP-Disk label, and it brought Ayler to international attention as it was so "shockingly different".[2] At the same time, it transformed ESP-DISK into "a major source for avant-garde jazz".[3] A 5-star review in AllMusic called it a "landmark recording that's essential to any basic understanding of free jazz", "the album that pushed Albert Ayler to the forefront of jazz's avant-garde... really the first available document of Ayler's music that matched him with a group of truly sympathetic musicians", and stated that "the results are a magnificently pure distillation of his aesthetic."[4]

Spiritual Unity
Studio album by
the Albert Ayler Trio
ReleasedMay 1965[1]
RecordedJuly 10, 1964
StudioNew York City
GenreFree jazz
Length29:13
LabelESP-Disk
ProducerBernard Stollman
Albert Ayler chronology
Prophecy
(1964)
Spiritual Unity
(1965)
New York Eye and Ear Control
(1964)

Background edit

In late December 1963, Bernard Stollman, who had been toying with the idea of starting a record label, went, at the insistence of a friend, to hear Ayler at the Baby Grand Café on 125th Street in Harlem.[5] Ayler had moved to New York City earlier in the year, and had recently been playing with a variety of musicians, including Ornette Coleman, with whom Ayler made an informal recording earlier that month,[6] and Cecil Taylor, with whom he would perform on New Years Eve on a concert at Philharmonic Hall, Lincoln Center that would also feature the John Coltrane quintet and Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers.[7] According to Stollman, upon arriving at the Baby Grand Cafe,

Elmo Hope was at the piano, with his trio, on an elevated stage. I sat and listened to them. Several minutes later, a small man in a gray leather suit, holding a large saxophone, brushed by me and jumped up on the stage. He had a black beard, with a little patch of white in it. He was not introduced and, ignoring the trio, he began to blow his horn. The other musicians stopped and looked at him. No words were exchanged. Elmo Hope quietly closed his piano, the bass player parked his bass, the drummer put his sticks down, and they all sat back to listen. He was playing solo, and he kept right on playing for twenty to thirty minutes, just a burst of music. It seemed like a second; it was no time at all! Then he stopped and jumped down from the platform, covered with sweat.[8]

Stollman then approached Ayler, told him he was starting a record label, and asked him to be his first artist, offering a $500 advance.[9] Ayler agreed, and stated that he would contact Stollman after fulfulling a commitment to record material at Atlantic Studios.[8] (Here he was referring to the February 24, 1964 session that yielded two albums, Spirits, later reissued as Witches & Devils, and Swing Low Sweet Spiritual.)

In early 1964, Ayler briefly joined a quartet led by Paul Bley.[10] This occasion introduced Ayler to bassist Gary Peacock, who had been playing with Bley for several years, and who had also recently recorded with Bill Evans. Bley's group also included drummer Sunny Murray, with whom Ayler had played in Cecil Taylor's group.[10] (Murray was featured on both of Ayler's February 24 recordings.) The Bley quartet did not record, and made only one public appearance at the Take 3 coffeehouse in Greenwich Village.[10] By late spring, Ayler, Peacock, and Murray had formed a trio, after Peacock left Miles Davis' group, where he was substituting for Ron Carter.[11] On June 14, the trio played at the Cellar Café in New York City and recorded the material that would be released on the album Prophecy, which features some of the pieces that would be recorded for Spiritual Unity less than a month later.

Recording and release edit

That same month, Ayler called Stollman and told him he would like to make a recording. According to Val Wilmer, Ayler's decision to join Stollman's label, which would be called ESP-Disk, was made "against the advice of Cecil Taylor and other musicians who thought that artists should hold out for a price commensurate with their talent."[12] Ayler justified his decision, stating: "I felt my art was so important that I had to get it out. At that time I was musically out of this world. I knew I had to play this music for the people."[2]

Stollman booked a session for July 10 at Variety Arts Studio, a small and inexpensive studio near Times Square which had been used frequently by Moe Asch, the owner of Folkways Records,[8] for whom Stollman had done legal work.[13] Stollman recalled:

Just before 1 PM, Sunny Murray arrived, a large, genial walrus, moving and speaking with an easy agility that belied his appearance. Gary Peacock was next, tall, thin, ascetic looking, and soft spoken, with an introspective and kindly demeanor. Albert Ayler was last, small, wary and laconic.[14]

The recording engineer left the studio door open, and Stollman and Peacock's then-wife Annette sat in the reception area.[8] According to Stollman,

As the music played, I was enthralled, exhilarated, jubilant. I exchanged glances with Annette and said, "What an auspicious beginning for a record label!" She nodded her head in agreement.[8]

At one point, "the engineer fled the control room for a few minutes, but returned in time to change the tape for the next selection".[14] Although the session was well-miked, Stollman was "horrified" to learn that it had been recorded monaurally. However, years later he stated: "In forty-plus years, no one has ever cared".[8] The musicians were paid and signed recording agreements after the session, in a nearby cafe.[14]

Stollman hired Jordan Matthews, formerly a producer for ABC, as his art director, and Matthews brought in Howard Bernstein to do the cover art.[15] Stollman stated that he decided to silk-screen the cover, lending it "a primal quality, suitable for ESP".[16] Despite the fact that it was the first true ESP-Disk recording, Spiritual Unity was released in 1965 as the second item in the label's catalog, following a record titled Ni Kantu En Esperanto, which Stollman described as "just an exercise" resulting from his interest in Esperanto.[13] (Stollman recalled that when he recorded the Esperanto album, he "had no thoughts of doing anything beyond that".)[13]

Early releases of Spiritual Unity contained a booklet titled "Ayler - Peacock - Murray - You and the Night and the Music" with text by Paul Haines.[17] The album liner notes state that the symbol "Y" that appears on the back cover "pre-dates recorded history and has always represented the rising spirit of man. We thought the sign particularly apt for this album."[18] The booklet has never been included in any CD reissue, but it was included in the "Holy Ghost" box set.

Ayler was pleased with the recording, and felt that it represented a very high level of musical interaction, stating: "Most people would have thought this impossible but it actually happened. The most important thing is to stay in tune with each other but it takes spiritual people to do this... We weren't playing, we were listening to each other."[2] Following its release, Ayler sent a copy of the album to John Coltrane, and soon afterwards, Coltrane urged Impulse! Records to sign Ayler. In June 1965, Coltrane recorded the album Ascension; following the recording session, Coltrane "called Ayler and told him, 'I recorded an album and found that I was playing just like you.' Albert's reply: 'No man, don't you see, you were playing like yourself. You were just feeling what I feel and were just crying out for spiritual unity."[19]

Stollman was energized by the experience, and recalled: "I was thrilled with that record, so I was very much charged up with the idea of going forward. I wanted to explore this new music."[20] A week following the Spiritual Unity session, Ayler, Peacock, and Murray, along with Don Cherry, John Tchicai, and Roswell Rudd, recorded New York Eye and Ear Control, which would also be released by ESP-Disk. The label would issue several additional Ayler albums, including Bells and Spirits Rejoice. According to Stollman, following Ayler's death in 1970, he represented the musician's estate.[21]

Critical reception edit

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic     [4]
Penguin Guide to Jazz👑    [22]
Pitchfork9.3/10[23]
The Rolling Stone Jazz Record Guide     [24]

Initial critical reaction to Spiritual Unity was mixed. Scott Deveaux and Gary Giddins observed that the album "was both cheered and ridiculed", and stated that "Ayler's huge sound evoked lusty hysteria".[3] In July 1965, DownBeat published an article which featured a negative, zero-star review by Kenny Dorham, who wrote that the album is "not worth the paper it takes to review it. Too far out. He passed the moon and the stars", alongside a positive review by Bill Mathieu, who wrote: "Notes disappear into wide, irregular ribbons, fragmented, prismatic, wind-blown, undetermined, and filled with fury. Though the fury is frightening, dangerous, it achieves absolute certainty through being, musically, absolutely contained... Ayler seemingly rarely hears one note at a time—as if it were useless ever to consider the particles of a thing. He seems to want to scan all notes at all times and in this way speak to an expanded consciousness. And the consistency in this outpouring is a reference point from which his music takes shape... Ayler's music, as well as most avant-garde music, is, at best, difficult to listen to. It is nevertheless a very direct statement, the physical manifestation of a spiritual or mystical ritual. Its logic is the logic of human flesh in the sphere of the spirit. Could it be that ritual is more accessible to some listeners than it is to others?"[25]

Recent reaction has been more positive. The authors of The Penguin Guide to Jazz selected the album as part of their suggested "Core Collection," awarding it a "crown" in addition to a four-star rating, and commenting: "the 1964 Ayler trio was quintessentially a listening band, locked in a personal struggle which it is possible only to observe, awestruck, from the sidelines."[26] In 2013, Spin included it on the "Top 100 Alternative Albums of the 1960s" list.[27] In 2017, Pitchfork placed it at number 30 on the "200 Best Albums of the 1960s" list.[28]

Val Wilmer wrote that Spiritual Unity "revolutionised the direction for anyone playing those three instruments. The music was shockingly different - Ayler disquietingly harsh and brutal but at the same time deeply tinged with pathos, Peacock listening as he played monumental bass figures, Murray behaving, as LeRoi Jones once put it, as though 'he might just want to disappear' - but its conclusions seemed so simple when you listened to it. Ayler, Murray and Peacock had created the perfect group music."[2] According to John Corbett, Spiritual Unity represents "one of the most radical moments" in an "alternative way of thinking" where instrumentalists ask: "What is my supposed role, and what if I don't want to live by it?"[29] He wrote: "The saxophone and bass and drums are doing something quite different from what they normally do—the bassist... is melodic, skittish, and virtuosic; the drummer... gathers pools and eddies of sound, mounting and dissipating volume, his cymbals awash in nervous energy; the saxophonist... only plays a smidge of melodic material, concentrating on ecstatic shouts and cries, swooping across the others in big slurs and swipes, lightning flashing across a turbulent sea. The conventional roles of the instruments are upended, reinvented."[30] Corbett went on to compare the experience to "driving an automobile in which the relationships between the parts of the motor are repeatedly reinvented."[31]

Ted Gioia called Spiritual Unity "a major statement, the most cohesive ensemble project the saxophonist had undertaken to date", in which "Ayler showed that his radical remaking of the jazz saxophone vocabulary was largely self-sufficient, needing no other horns to set it off or support its blistering attack. It encompassed fervent explorations of harmonics, haunting stringlike evocations in the higher register, and Vesuvian explosions of sonic lava. Peacock and Murray hold onto these energized lines with the determination of cowpokes latching onto steers at the rodeo. To their credit, they grapple masterfully with Ayler's unpredictable leaps and turns."[32] The authors of The Penguin Jazz Guide described Ayler's trio as "quintessentially a listening band, locked in a personal struggle which it is possible only to observe, awestruck, from the side-lines", and, having noted that Ayler had recorded traditional material on Swing Low Sweet Spiritual earlier that year, wrote: "Heard in that context, it is impossible to consider Spiritual Unity as anything other than an extension of vernacular themes, played in an ecstatic manner typical of the African-American churches. Brief as it is, it remains a record of immitigable power and authority, but there is humour under the surface and a humanity that is rarely acknowledged."[33]

Saxophonist Shabaka Hutchings, leader of the band Sons of Kemet, wrote that the first time he listened to Spiritual Unity, he "didn't understand anything!... My brain couldn't compute it." He commented: "this was untranscribable – it seemed like there was nothing to steal from it. It sounded like he was crying through the saxophone. You can hear vocalisation in Sidney Bechet and the older guys, but this was the first time I'd heard someone follow through on that and not try to mesh it with something more conventional". Eventually, he stated, "The more I listened, the more I realised that it's in what Anthony Braxton calls 'an emotional zone' – whatever Ayler does, it's about the emotional intent behind it. I wanted to see whether I could get into that space where you're free to do that. It's all about the big picture – more like painting."[34]

Mark Richardson wrote that Ayler had a "telepathic empathy" with Peacock and Murray on Spiritual Unity, and stated: "Together Peacock and Murray form a sound backing that at times seems more like an endlessly shifting cluster of sound than an actual rhythm section. Murray has a light, rapid touch, keeping the cymbals and snares going pretty much constantly, never breaking the flow of the music with a heavy roll, and Peacock functions as an extension of his textures." He concluded by calling the album "short... intense, and a deserved classic."[23] John Fordham, writing in The Guardian, commented: "Half a century since the trio unleashed this music in a tiny Times Square studio, it still blazes, uplifts and unnerves. Ayler emerges from a Sonny Rollins-like jauntiness into slurred-pitch flurries and klaxon hoots over Peacock's prodding lines and Murray's shadings on the opening 'Ghosts'; barges ferociously through seamless runs on 'The Wizard'; and calls imploringly in a tone somewhere between an impassioned singer and a microtonal viola player on the meditative 'Spirits'. It still sounds like music on the edge".[35]

In a review for All About Jazz, Mark Corroto called the album "30 minutes that changed the direction of jazz", and wrote: "Fifty years after the recording of Albert Ayler's Spiritual Unity, the music (and the man) are still causing tumult. It is not so much that free jazz hasn't been on our radar these past decades, it's just that this recording remains one of those 'where were you, when you first heard it?' experiences." He continued: "Bassist Gary Peacock... doesn't so much keep time as feed the fires of Ayler's free folk jazz playing. Peacock bridged from his work with pianists Bill Evans and Paul Bley into this open expression with Ayler. Hearing him bow lines on 'Spirits' or pull energy bombs on 'Ghosts' is akin to watching a boxer working out on a speed bag. The same holds true for drummer Sunny Murray who eschews the presumptions of pulse for accent. His cymbal work sizzles throughout... Ayler's marches, his folk-jazz and New Orleans brass sound was (is) an audacious and indomitable approach to music making that was both revolutionary and an 'ah-ha' moment in the development of free jazz of the 1960s that still resonates loudly today".[36]

Ayler biographer Jeff Schwartz stated: "The music recorded at this session is simply incredible... All three members are constantly improvising freely. It is only convention that makes one hear a saxophone accompanied by bass and drums. In fact, while there is quite a bit of brilliant interaction between the players, it is much more helpful to view the pieces recorded by the Ayler trio as sets of simultaneous solos. Never before (or maybe since) had an ensemble taken the New Orleans ideal of collective improvisation to such an extreme level." Regarding Ayler's tone, Schwartz wrote: "No jazz player had ever used a vibrato as wide as Ayler's and it is primarily the melodrama of this sound that led critics to describe him as primitive. In this crying, braying oscillation of pitch is perhaps Ayler's greatest break with jazz tradition. It is as if he is refusing to be 'hip,' to hide his feelings, to be 'cool,' like the vibratoless Paul Desmond and Lee Konitz. He has gone beyond the vocalized vibrato of players like Louis Armstrong to what can only be described as sobbing."[10] Writer Ekkehard Jost noted that "Ayler's negation of fixed pitches finds a counterpart in Peacock's and Murray's negation of the beat. In no group of this time is so little heard of a steady beat... The absolute rhythmic freedom frequently leads to action on three independent rhythmic planes: Ayler improvises in long drawn-out sound-spans; Peacock hints at chains of impulses, irregular and yet swinging in a remote sense; Murray plays on cymbals with a very live resonance, creating colour rather than accentuation."[37]

Music critic S. Victor Aaron wrote: "Jazz began as Buddy Bolden's ragtime inspired by former slaves performing in New Orleans' Congo Square during the latter years of the nineteenth century. Somehow it ended up some seventy years later in a studio just off of New York's Times Square. That's when and where Albert Ayler and his trio recorded Spiritual Unity on one summer day in 1964... it was apparent that the maverick saxophonist Albert Ayler walked into that studio fifty years ago last week to bring jazz to the terminus point in its trajectory of development." He continued: "this record was well ahead of the frontier of jazz. And still today, there's not much out there that is truly 'out there' as Spiritual Unity. There are scant few among those that possess its uncanny focus and unified purpose... To go way forward in music, you have to go back fifty years."[38]

In a review, writer Jackson Brown stated: "Albert Ayler's Spiritual Unity is a confluence of divergent paths stretching back as far as our species can trace, as far as man's first experiments with giving force a form in the manner of sound... It is not the mere representation of the thing that Ayler achieves here, but the recontextualization, the liberation of the American musical tradition. The result is otherworldly... Ayler desired to dispense with the constraints of musical notes and conventional composition. In its place, he sought the sound in between notes and the expression of his instrument as a primal force, an extension of himself in which to explore a unique timbre, improvising in both high and low registers with squeaks, honks, blasts: bursts of passion them all". Regarding the trio, he wrote: "the amount of understanding this group has for each other's tendencies and creative pursuits is staggering, nigh telepathic... the entire album is three separate 'solos,' each one building off of the other. The group feels less like three different musicians and more like a unified, spiritual organism in communion with itself". He concluded: "Albert Ayler drew on the disparate musics of the American tradition and boldly forged his own path through the flames, inspiring some of the most inspirational figures in jazz and shaping the future of avant-garde music to come. He will not be forgotten, or forgiven, for that".[39]

Track listing edit

All tracks are written by Albert Ayler

No.TitleLength
1."Ghosts: First Variation"5:12
2."The Wizard"7:20
3."Spirits"6:46
4."Ghosts: Second Variation"10:01
Total length:29:13
2014 reissue edition bonus track
No.TitleLength
5."Vibrations"7:49
Total length:37:17

Personnel edit

Credits adapted from liner notes.

References edit

  1. ^ Billboard May 1, 1965
  2. ^ a b c d Wilmer, Val (2018). As Serious as your Life. Serpent's Tail. p. 139.
  3. ^ a b DeVeaux, Scott; Giddins, Gary (2009). Jazz. W. W. Norton. p. 425.
  4. ^ a b Huey, Steve. "Spiritual Unity - Albert Ayler". AllMusic. Retrieved November 27, 2020.
  5. ^ Weiss, Jason (2012). Always in Trouble: An Oral History of ESP-Disk, the Most Outrageous Record Label in America. Wesleyan University Press. pp. 20–21.
  6. ^ Regan, Patrick. "Albert Ayler Sessionography". ayler.co.uk. Retrieved November 27, 2020.
  7. ^ Porter, Lewis; DeVito, Chris; Fujioka, Yasuhiro; Wild, David; Schmaler, Wolf (2008). The John Coltrane Reference. Routledge. pp. 293–294.
  8. ^ a b c d e f Weiss, Jason (2012). Always in Trouble: An Oral History of ESP-Disk, the Most Outrageous Record Label in America. Wesleyan University Press. p. 21.
  9. ^ Richardson, Mark (April 28, 2016). "New York Is Killing Me: Albert Ayler's Life and Death in the Jazz Capital". Pitchfork. Retrieved November 27, 2020.
  10. ^ a b c d Schwartz, Jeff. . Archived from the original on 2010-12-06. Retrieved July 10, 2020.
  11. ^ Palm, Kristin. "Gary Peacock". Encyclopedia.com. Retrieved June 27, 2020.
  12. ^ Wilmer, Val (2018). As Serious as your Life. Serpent's Tail. p. 138.
  13. ^ a b c Weiss, Jason (2012). Always in Trouble: An Oral History of ESP-Disk, the Most Outrageous Record Label in America. Wesleyan University Press. p. 20.
  14. ^ a b c "Spiritual Unity LP and new Expanded CD". ESP-Disk. Retrieved November 27, 2020.
  15. ^ Weiss, Jason (2012). Always in Trouble: An Oral History of ESP-Disk, the Most Outrageous Record Label in America. Wesleyan University Press. p. 23.
  16. ^ Weiss, Jason (2012). Always in Trouble: An Oral History of ESP-Disk, the Most Outrageous Record Label in America. Wesleyan University Press. p. 25.
  17. ^ Regan, Patrick. "Spiritual Unity - The Booklet". ayler.co.uk. Retrieved November 27, 2020.
  18. ^ Spiritual Unity (liner notes). Albert Ayler. ESP-Disk. 1965. ESP-1002.{{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)
  19. ^ Wilmer, Val (2018). As Serious as your Life. Serpent's Tail. p. 142.
  20. ^ Weiss, Jason (2012). Always in Trouble: An Oral History of ESP-Disk, the Most Outrageous Record Label in America. Wesleyan University Press. p. 22.
  21. ^ Weiss, Jason (2012). Always in Trouble: An Oral History of ESP-Disk, the Most Outrageous Record Label in America. Wesleyan University Press. p. 46.
  22. ^ "Penguin Guide to Jazz: 4-Star Records in 8th Edition". Tom Hull. Retrieved 9 July 2020.
  23. ^ a b Richardson, Mark (March 14, 2005). "Albert Ayler: Spiritual Unity / Live on the Riviera". Pitchfork. Retrieved April 21, 2020.
  24. ^ Swenson, J., ed. (1985). The Rolling Stone Jazz Record Guide. USA: Random House/Rolling Stone. p. 16. ISBN 0-394-72643-X.
  25. ^ Dorham, Kenny; Mathieu, Bill (July 15, 1965). "Two Views of Three Outer Views". DownBeat. Vol. 32, no. 15. pp. 29–31.
  26. ^ Cook, Richard; Morton, Brian (2006). "Albert Ayler". The Penguin Guide to Jazz Recordings (8th ed.). New York: Penguin. pp. 54. ISBN 0-14-102327-9.
  27. ^ Gubbels, Jason (March 28, 2013). "The Top 100 Alternative Albums of the 1960s (page 83 of 101)". Spin. Retrieved April 21, 2020.
  28. ^ Schnipper, Matthew (August 22, 2017). "The 200 Best Albums of the 1960s (page 9 of 10)". Pitchfork. Retrieved April 21, 2020.
  29. ^ Corbett, John (2016). A Listener's Guide to Free Improvisation. University of Chicago Press. p. 51.
  30. ^ Corbett, John (2016). A Listener's Guide to Free Improvisation. University of Chicago Press. pp. 51–52.
  31. ^ Corbett, John (2016). A Listener's Guide to Free Improvisation. University of Chicago Press. p. 52.
  32. ^ Gioia, Ted (2011). The History of Jazz (second ed.). Oxford University Press. p. 324.
  33. ^ Morton, Brian; Cook, Richard (2010). The Penguin Jazz Guide. Penguin Books.
  34. ^ Hutchings, Shabaka (July 22, 2019). "Life-Changing Jazz Albums: 'Spiritual Unity' by the Albert Ayler Trio". JazzWise. Retrieved November 27, 2020.
  35. ^ Fordham, John (August 7, 2014). "Albert Ayler: Spiritual Unity review – music that blazes, uplifts and unnerves". The Guardian. Retrieved November 27, 2020.
  36. ^ Corroto, Mark (August 13, 2014). "Albert Ayler: Spiritual Unity". All About Jazz. Retrieved November 27, 2020.
  37. ^ Jost, Ekkehard (1994). Free Jazz. Da Capo. p. 128.
  38. ^ Aaron, S. Victor (July 16, 2014). "Albert Ayler Trio – Spiritual Unity (1964, 2014 50th Anniversary Expanded Edition)". Something Else!. Retrieved November 27, 2020.
  39. ^ Brown, Jackson (January 28, 2018). "Spiritual Unity, Albert Ayler". Emmie. Retrieved November 27, 2020.

External links edit

  • Spiritual Unity at Discogs (list of releases)

spiritual, unity, marc, ribot, album, marc, ribot, album, studio, album, american, free, jazz, saxophonist, albert, ayler, recorded, july, 1964, york, city, features, bassist, gary, peacock, drummer, sunny, murray, first, album, recorded, bernard, stollman, di. For the Marc Ribot album see Spiritual Unity Marc Ribot album Spiritual Unity is a studio album by American free jazz saxophonist Albert Ayler It was recorded on July 10 1964 in New York City and features bassist Gary Peacock and drummer Sunny Murray It was the first album recorded for Bernard Stollman s ESP Disk label and it brought Ayler to international attention as it was so shockingly different 2 At the same time it transformed ESP DISK into a major source for avant garde jazz 3 A 5 star review in AllMusic called it a landmark recording that s essential to any basic understanding of free jazz the album that pushed Albert Ayler to the forefront of jazz s avant garde really the first available document of Ayler s music that matched him with a group of truly sympathetic musicians and stated that the results are a magnificently pure distillation of his aesthetic 4 Spiritual UnityStudio album by the Albert Ayler TrioReleasedMay 1965 1 RecordedJuly 10 1964StudioNew York CityGenreFree jazzLength29 13LabelESP DiskProducerBernard StollmanAlbert Ayler chronologyProphecy 1964 Spiritual Unity 1965 New York Eye and Ear Control 1964 Contents 1 Background 2 Recording and release 3 Critical reception 4 Track listing 5 Personnel 6 References 7 External linksBackground editIn late December 1963 Bernard Stollman who had been toying with the idea of starting a record label went at the insistence of a friend to hear Ayler at the Baby Grand Cafe on 125th Street in Harlem 5 Ayler had moved to New York City earlier in the year and had recently been playing with a variety of musicians including Ornette Coleman with whom Ayler made an informal recording earlier that month 6 and Cecil Taylor with whom he would perform on New Years Eve on a concert at Philharmonic Hall Lincoln Center that would also feature the John Coltrane quintet and Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers 7 According to Stollman upon arriving at the Baby Grand Cafe Elmo Hope was at the piano with his trio on an elevated stage I sat and listened to them Several minutes later a small man in a gray leather suit holding a large saxophone brushed by me and jumped up on the stage He had a black beard with a little patch of white in it He was not introduced and ignoring the trio he began to blow his horn The other musicians stopped and looked at him No words were exchanged Elmo Hope quietly closed his piano the bass player parked his bass the drummer put his sticks down and they all sat back to listen He was playing solo and he kept right on playing for twenty to thirty minutes just a burst of music It seemed like a second it was no time at all Then he stopped and jumped down from the platform covered with sweat 8 Stollman then approached Ayler told him he was starting a record label and asked him to be his first artist offering a 500 advance 9 Ayler agreed and stated that he would contact Stollman after fulfulling a commitment to record material at Atlantic Studios 8 Here he was referring to the February 24 1964 session that yielded two albums Spirits later reissued as Witches amp Devils and Swing Low Sweet Spiritual In early 1964 Ayler briefly joined a quartet led by Paul Bley 10 This occasion introduced Ayler to bassist Gary Peacock who had been playing with Bley for several years and who had also recently recorded with Bill Evans Bley s group also included drummer Sunny Murray with whom Ayler had played in Cecil Taylor s group 10 Murray was featured on both of Ayler s February 24 recordings The Bley quartet did not record and made only one public appearance at the Take 3 coffeehouse in Greenwich Village 10 By late spring Ayler Peacock and Murray had formed a trio after Peacock left Miles Davis group where he was substituting for Ron Carter 11 On June 14 the trio played at the Cellar Cafe in New York City and recorded the material that would be released on the album Prophecy which features some of the pieces that would be recorded for Spiritual Unity less than a month later Recording and release editThat same month Ayler called Stollman and told him he would like to make a recording According to Val Wilmer Ayler s decision to join Stollman s label which would be called ESP Disk was made against the advice of Cecil Taylor and other musicians who thought that artists should hold out for a price commensurate with their talent 12 Ayler justified his decision stating I felt my art was so important that I had to get it out At that time I was musically out of this world I knew I had to play this music for the people 2 Stollman booked a session for July 10 at Variety Arts Studio a small and inexpensive studio near Times Square which had been used frequently by Moe Asch the owner of Folkways Records 8 for whom Stollman had done legal work 13 Stollman recalled Just before 1 PM Sunny Murray arrived a large genial walrus moving and speaking with an easy agility that belied his appearance Gary Peacock was next tall thin ascetic looking and soft spoken with an introspective and kindly demeanor Albert Ayler was last small wary and laconic 14 The recording engineer left the studio door open and Stollman and Peacock s then wife Annette sat in the reception area 8 According to Stollman As the music played I was enthralled exhilarated jubilant I exchanged glances with Annette and said What an auspicious beginning for a record label She nodded her head in agreement 8 At one point the engineer fled the control room for a few minutes but returned in time to change the tape for the next selection 14 Although the session was well miked Stollman was horrified to learn that it had been recorded monaurally However years later he stated In forty plus years no one has ever cared 8 The musicians were paid and signed recording agreements after the session in a nearby cafe 14 Stollman hired Jordan Matthews formerly a producer for ABC as his art director and Matthews brought in Howard Bernstein to do the cover art 15 Stollman stated that he decided to silk screen the cover lending it a primal quality suitable for ESP 16 Despite the fact that it was the first true ESP Disk recording Spiritual Unity was released in 1965 as the second item in the label s catalog following a record titled Ni Kantu En Esperanto which Stollman described as just an exercise resulting from his interest in Esperanto 13 Stollman recalled that when he recorded the Esperanto album he had no thoughts of doing anything beyond that 13 Early releases of Spiritual Unity contained a booklet titled Ayler Peacock Murray You and the Night and the Music with text by Paul Haines 17 The album liner notes state that the symbol Y that appears on the back cover pre dates recorded history and has always represented the rising spirit of man We thought the sign particularly apt for this album 18 The booklet has never been included in any CD reissue but it was included in the Holy Ghost box set Ayler was pleased with the recording and felt that it represented a very high level of musical interaction stating Most people would have thought this impossible but it actually happened The most important thing is to stay in tune with each other but it takes spiritual people to do this We weren t playing we were listening to each other 2 Following its release Ayler sent a copy of the album to John Coltrane and soon afterwards Coltrane urged Impulse Records to sign Ayler In June 1965 Coltrane recorded the album Ascension following the recording session Coltrane called Ayler and told him I recorded an album and found that I was playing just like you Albert s reply No man don t you see you were playing like yourself You were just feeling what I feel and were just crying out for spiritual unity 19 Stollman was energized by the experience and recalled I was thrilled with that record so I was very much charged up with the idea of going forward I wanted to explore this new music 20 A week following the Spiritual Unity session Ayler Peacock and Murray along with Don Cherry John Tchicai and Roswell Rudd recorded New York Eye and Ear Control which would also be released by ESP Disk The label would issue several additional Ayler albums including Bells and Spirits Rejoice According to Stollman following Ayler s death in 1970 he represented the musician s estate 21 Critical reception editProfessional ratingsReview scoresSourceRatingAllMusic nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 4 Penguin Guide to Jazz nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 22 Pitchfork9 3 10 23 The Rolling Stone Jazz Record Guide nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 24 Initial critical reaction to Spiritual Unity was mixed Scott Deveaux and Gary Giddins observed that the album was both cheered and ridiculed and stated that Ayler s huge sound evoked lusty hysteria 3 In July 1965 DownBeat published an article which featured a negative zero star review by Kenny Dorham who wrote that the album is not worth the paper it takes to review it Too far out He passed the moon and the stars alongside a positive review by Bill Mathieu who wrote Notes disappear into wide irregular ribbons fragmented prismatic wind blown undetermined and filled with fury Though the fury is frightening dangerous it achieves absolute certainty through being musically absolutely contained Ayler seemingly rarely hears one note at a time as if it were useless ever to consider the particles of a thing He seems to want to scan all notes at all times and in this way speak to an expanded consciousness And the consistency in this outpouring is a reference point from which his music takes shape Ayler s music as well as most avant garde music is at best difficult to listen to It is nevertheless a very direct statement the physical manifestation of a spiritual or mystical ritual Its logic is the logic of human flesh in the sphere of the spirit Could it be that ritual is more accessible to some listeners than it is to others 25 Recent reaction has been more positive The authors of The Penguin Guide to Jazz selected the album as part of their suggested Core Collection awarding it a crown in addition to a four star rating and commenting the 1964 Ayler trio was quintessentially a listening band locked in a personal struggle which it is possible only to observe awestruck from the sidelines 26 In 2013 Spin included it on the Top 100 Alternative Albums of the 1960s list 27 In 2017 Pitchfork placed it at number 30 on the 200 Best Albums of the 1960s list 28 Val Wilmer wrote that Spiritual Unity revolutionised the direction for anyone playing those three instruments The music was shockingly different Ayler disquietingly harsh and brutal but at the same time deeply tinged with pathos Peacock listening as he played monumental bass figures Murray behaving as LeRoi Jones once put it as though he might just want to disappear but its conclusions seemed so simple when you listened to it Ayler Murray and Peacock had created the perfect group music 2 According to John Corbett Spiritual Unity represents one of the most radical moments in an alternative way of thinking where instrumentalists ask What is my supposed role and what if I don t want to live by it 29 He wrote The saxophone and bass and drums are doing something quite different from what they normally do the bassist is melodic skittish and virtuosic the drummer gathers pools and eddies of sound mounting and dissipating volume his cymbals awash in nervous energy the saxophonist only plays a smidge of melodic material concentrating on ecstatic shouts and cries swooping across the others in big slurs and swipes lightning flashing across a turbulent sea The conventional roles of the instruments are upended reinvented 30 Corbett went on to compare the experience to driving an automobile in which the relationships between the parts of the motor are repeatedly reinvented 31 Ted Gioia called Spiritual Unity a major statement the most cohesive ensemble project the saxophonist had undertaken to date in which Ayler showed that his radical remaking of the jazz saxophone vocabulary was largely self sufficient needing no other horns to set it off or support its blistering attack It encompassed fervent explorations of harmonics haunting stringlike evocations in the higher register and Vesuvian explosions of sonic lava Peacock and Murray hold onto these energized lines with the determination of cowpokes latching onto steers at the rodeo To their credit they grapple masterfully with Ayler s unpredictable leaps and turns 32 The authors of The Penguin Jazz Guide described Ayler s trio as quintessentially a listening band locked in a personal struggle which it is possible only to observe awestruck from the side lines and having noted that Ayler had recorded traditional material on Swing Low Sweet Spiritual earlier that year wrote Heard in that context it is impossible to consider Spiritual Unity as anything other than an extension of vernacular themes played in an ecstatic manner typical of the African American churches Brief as it is it remains a record of immitigable power and authority but there is humour under the surface and a humanity that is rarely acknowledged 33 Saxophonist Shabaka Hutchings leader of the band Sons of Kemet wrote that the first time he listened to Spiritual Unity he didn t understand anything My brain couldn t compute it He commented this was untranscribable it seemed like there was nothing to steal from it It sounded like he was crying through the saxophone You can hear vocalisation in Sidney Bechet and the older guys but this was the first time I d heard someone follow through on that and not try to mesh it with something more conventional Eventually he stated The more I listened the more I realised that it s in what Anthony Braxton calls an emotional zone whatever Ayler does it s about the emotional intent behind it I wanted to see whether I could get into that space where you re free to do that It s all about the big picture more like painting 34 Mark Richardson wrote that Ayler had a telepathic empathy with Peacock and Murray on Spiritual Unity and stated Together Peacock and Murray form a sound backing that at times seems more like an endlessly shifting cluster of sound than an actual rhythm section Murray has a light rapid touch keeping the cymbals and snares going pretty much constantly never breaking the flow of the music with a heavy roll and Peacock functions as an extension of his textures He concluded by calling the album short intense and a deserved classic 23 John Fordham writing in The Guardian commented Half a century since the trio unleashed this music in a tiny Times Square studio it still blazes uplifts and unnerves Ayler emerges from a Sonny Rollins like jauntiness into slurred pitch flurries and klaxon hoots over Peacock s prodding lines and Murray s shadings on the opening Ghosts barges ferociously through seamless runs on The Wizard and calls imploringly in a tone somewhere between an impassioned singer and a microtonal viola player on the meditative Spirits It still sounds like music on the edge 35 In a review for All About Jazz Mark Corroto called the album 30 minutes that changed the direction of jazz and wrote Fifty years after the recording of Albert Ayler s Spiritual Unity the music and the man are still causing tumult It is not so much that free jazz hasn t been on our radar these past decades it s just that this recording remains one of those where were you when you first heard it experiences He continued Bassist Gary Peacock doesn t so much keep time as feed the fires of Ayler s free folk jazz playing Peacock bridged from his work with pianists Bill Evans and Paul Bley into this open expression with Ayler Hearing him bow lines on Spirits or pull energy bombs on Ghosts is akin to watching a boxer working out on a speed bag The same holds true for drummer Sunny Murray who eschews the presumptions of pulse for accent His cymbal work sizzles throughout Ayler s marches his folk jazz and New Orleans brass sound was is an audacious and indomitable approach to music making that was both revolutionary and an ah ha moment in the development of free jazz of the 1960s that still resonates loudly today 36 Ayler biographer Jeff Schwartz stated The music recorded at this session is simply incredible All three members are constantly improvising freely It is only convention that makes one hear a saxophone accompanied by bass and drums In fact while there is quite a bit of brilliant interaction between the players it is much more helpful to view the pieces recorded by the Ayler trio as sets of simultaneous solos Never before or maybe since had an ensemble taken the New Orleans ideal of collective improvisation to such an extreme level Regarding Ayler s tone Schwartz wrote No jazz player had ever used a vibrato as wide as Ayler s and it is primarily the melodrama of this sound that led critics to describe him as primitive In this crying braying oscillation of pitch is perhaps Ayler s greatest break with jazz tradition It is as if he is refusing to be hip to hide his feelings to be cool like the vibratoless Paul Desmond and Lee Konitz He has gone beyond the vocalized vibrato of players like Louis Armstrong to what can only be described as sobbing 10 Writer Ekkehard Jost noted that Ayler s negation of fixed pitches finds a counterpart in Peacock s and Murray s negation of the beat In no group of this time is so little heard of a steady beat The absolute rhythmic freedom frequently leads to action on three independent rhythmic planes Ayler improvises in long drawn out sound spans Peacock hints at chains of impulses irregular and yet swinging in a remote sense Murray plays on cymbals with a very live resonance creating colour rather than accentuation 37 Music critic S Victor Aaron wrote Jazz began as Buddy Bolden s ragtime inspired by former slaves performing in New Orleans Congo Square during the latter years of the nineteenth century Somehow it ended up some seventy years later in a studio just off of New York s Times Square That s when and where Albert Ayler and his trio recorded Spiritual Unity on one summer day in 1964 it was apparent that the maverick saxophonist Albert Ayler walked into that studio fifty years ago last week to bring jazz to the terminus point in its trajectory of development He continued this record was well ahead of the frontier of jazz And still today there s not much out there that is truly out there as Spiritual Unity There are scant few among those that possess its uncanny focus and unified purpose To go way forward in music you have to go back fifty years 38 In a review writer Jackson Brown stated Albert Ayler s Spiritual Unity is a confluence of divergent paths stretching back as far as our species can trace as far as man s first experiments with giving force a form in the manner of sound It is not the mere representation of the thing that Ayler achieves here but the recontextualization the liberation of the American musical tradition The result is otherworldly Ayler desired to dispense with the constraints of musical notes and conventional composition In its place he sought the sound in between notes and the expression of his instrument as a primal force an extension of himself in which to explore a unique timbre improvising in both high and low registers with squeaks honks blasts bursts of passion them all Regarding the trio he wrote the amount of understanding this group has for each other s tendencies and creative pursuits is staggering nigh telepathic the entire album is three separate solos each one building off of the other The group feels less like three different musicians and more like a unified spiritual organism in communion with itself He concluded Albert Ayler drew on the disparate musics of the American tradition and boldly forged his own path through the flames inspiring some of the most inspirational figures in jazz and shaping the future of avant garde music to come He will not be forgotten or forgiven for that 39 Track listing editAll tracks are written by Albert AylerNo TitleLength1 Ghosts First Variation 5 122 The Wizard 7 203 Spirits 6 464 Ghosts Second Variation 10 01Total length 29 13 2014 reissue edition bonus trackNo TitleLength5 Vibrations 7 49Total length 37 17Personnel editCredits adapted from liner notes Albert Ayler tenor saxophone Gary Peacock double bass Sunny Murray percussionReferences edit Billboard May 1 1965 a b c d Wilmer Val 2018 As Serious as your Life Serpent s Tail p 139 a b DeVeaux Scott Giddins Gary 2009 Jazz W W Norton p 425 a b Huey Steve Spiritual Unity Albert Ayler AllMusic Retrieved November 27 2020 Weiss Jason 2012 Always in Trouble An Oral History of ESP Disk the Most Outrageous Record Label in America Wesleyan University Press pp 20 21 Regan Patrick Albert Ayler Sessionography ayler co uk Retrieved November 27 2020 Porter Lewis DeVito Chris Fujioka Yasuhiro Wild David Schmaler Wolf 2008 The John Coltrane Reference Routledge pp 293 294 a b c d e f Weiss Jason 2012 Always in Trouble An Oral History of ESP Disk the Most Outrageous Record Label in America Wesleyan University Press p 21 Richardson Mark April 28 2016 New York Is Killing Me Albert Ayler s Life and Death in the Jazz Capital Pitchfork Retrieved November 27 2020 a b c d Schwartz Jeff Albert Ayler His Life and Music Chapter 2 1963 64 Archived from the original on 2010 12 06 Retrieved July 10 2020 Palm Kristin Gary Peacock Encyclopedia com Retrieved June 27 2020 Wilmer Val 2018 As Serious as your Life Serpent s Tail p 138 a b c Weiss Jason 2012 Always in Trouble An Oral History of ESP Disk the Most Outrageous Record Label in America Wesleyan University Press p 20 a b c Spiritual Unity LP and new Expanded CD ESP Disk Retrieved November 27 2020 Weiss Jason 2012 Always in Trouble An Oral History of ESP Disk the Most Outrageous Record Label in America Wesleyan University Press p 23 Weiss Jason 2012 Always in Trouble An Oral History of ESP Disk the Most Outrageous Record Label in America Wesleyan University Press p 25 Regan Patrick Spiritual Unity The Booklet ayler co uk Retrieved November 27 2020 Spiritual Unity liner notes Albert Ayler ESP Disk 1965 ESP 1002 a href Template Cite AV media notes html title Template Cite AV media notes cite AV media notes a CS1 maint others in cite AV media notes link Wilmer Val 2018 As Serious as your Life Serpent s Tail p 142 Weiss Jason 2012 Always in Trouble An Oral History of ESP Disk the Most Outrageous Record Label in America Wesleyan University Press p 22 Weiss Jason 2012 Always in Trouble An Oral History of ESP Disk the Most Outrageous Record Label in America Wesleyan University Press p 46 Penguin Guide to Jazz 4 Star Records in 8th Edition Tom Hull Retrieved 9 July 2020 a b Richardson Mark March 14 2005 Albert Ayler Spiritual Unity Live on the Riviera Pitchfork Retrieved April 21 2020 Swenson J ed 1985 The Rolling Stone Jazz Record Guide USA Random House Rolling Stone p 16 ISBN 0 394 72643 X Dorham Kenny Mathieu Bill July 15 1965 Two Views of Three Outer Views DownBeat Vol 32 no 15 pp 29 31 Cook Richard Morton Brian 2006 Albert Ayler The Penguin Guide to Jazz Recordings 8th ed New York Penguin pp 54 ISBN 0 14 102327 9 Gubbels Jason March 28 2013 The Top 100 Alternative Albums of the 1960s page 83 of 101 Spin Retrieved April 21 2020 Schnipper Matthew August 22 2017 The 200 Best Albums of the 1960s page 9 of 10 Pitchfork Retrieved April 21 2020 Corbett John 2016 A Listener s Guide to Free Improvisation University of Chicago Press p 51 Corbett John 2016 A Listener s Guide to Free Improvisation University of Chicago Press pp 51 52 Corbett John 2016 A Listener s Guide to Free Improvisation University of Chicago Press p 52 Gioia Ted 2011 The History of Jazz second ed Oxford University Press p 324 Morton Brian Cook Richard 2010 The Penguin Jazz Guide Penguin Books Hutchings Shabaka July 22 2019 Life Changing Jazz Albums Spiritual Unity by the Albert Ayler Trio JazzWise Retrieved November 27 2020 Fordham John August 7 2014 Albert Ayler Spiritual Unity review music that blazes uplifts and unnerves The Guardian Retrieved November 27 2020 Corroto Mark August 13 2014 Albert Ayler Spiritual Unity All About Jazz Retrieved November 27 2020 Jost Ekkehard 1994 Free Jazz Da Capo p 128 Aaron S Victor July 16 2014 Albert Ayler Trio Spiritual Unity 1964 2014 50th Anniversary Expanded Edition Something Else Retrieved November 27 2020 Brown Jackson January 28 2018 Spiritual Unity Albert Ayler Emmie Retrieved November 27 2020 External links editSpiritual Unity at Discogs list of releases Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Spiritual Unity amp oldid 1145181527, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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