Spiritual Unity by Albert Ayler Trio

Spiritual Unity

Albert Ayler Trio

1965

Spiritual Unity is a Jazz album by Albert Ayler Trio, originally released in 1965. On Gatefold: 59 pressings tracked.

Sound DNA

  • Jazz
  • Avant-Garde & Free Jazz
  • sparse
  • intense
  • cerebral

About

This classic July 1964 trio set, Albert Ayler’s first for the storied avant-garde label ESP Disk, is an excellent introduction to the doggedly nonconventional tenor saxophone sound that changed improvised music forever. With bassist Gary Peacock and drummer Sunny Murray, Ayler largely broke free of tonality and regular pulse, instead mining a vocabulary of timbre and attack, yielding a raw spiritual cry that spanned the range of the horn and often reached beyond it. It was arguably the most influential tenor sound after Coltrane’s, a guiding light for such heirs as Peter Brötzmann and David S. Ware. Murray’s flexible, reactive feel pointed the way forward for many drummers after him as well. But in Ayler’s music, the initial themes (on “Ghosts,” for example) could be disarmingly plain and simple, like fanfares, harking back to the catchy melodic material of earlier jazz eras. Ayler also employed far more vibrato than was common in the days of John Coltrane’s ascendance. The wavering tone at the end of “Spirits” almost recalls the stylized 1920s saxophone sound of Frankie Trumbauer. His dynamic shifts (loud to soft) and sly textural subtleties could surprise, but mainly the intensity throughout <i>Spiritual Unity</i> is full-blast, a rhetoric of unfiltered emotion, pure and true (“The Wizard,” “Vibrations”). It was punk rock before punk rock.

via Apple Music

The Clerk's got thoughts on this one. Mosh members get the full take →

Every pressing, with live pricesUnlock the pressing explorer + marketplace prices with Mosh Pit.

Tracklist

  1. 1Ghosts: First Variation5:14
  2. 2The Wizard7:22
  3. 3Spirits6:48
  4. 4Ghosts: Second Variation10:03
  5. 5Vibrations7:49

Credits

Performers

Rare pressing on Gatefold · 59 pressings tracked on Gatefold