Witches & Devils

Witches & Devils Artist: Albert Ayler
Label: 1201 Music
Category: Music



Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
Format: Original recording remastered
Media: Audio CD
Number Of Discs: 1


UPC: 660652900624
EAN: 0660652900624
ASIN: B00000J8A2


Release Date: 1999-06-01

Related Categories:

Avant Garde & Free Jazz Avant Garde & Free Jazz
Related | Jazz | Styles | Music
General General
Related | Jazz | Styles | Music
General General
Related | Pop | Styles | Music
General General
Related | Jazz | Indie Music | Stores | Music
Avant-Garde Avant-Garde
Related | Jazz | Indie Music | Stores | Music

Listmania:

  1. Moving avant-garde and free jazz
  2. free jazz for space rock fans
  3. Creative Music books and CDs to get you started
  4. This Music's Normal. It's Radio That's Insane.
  5. Music I Like
  6. Harry Potter's Favourite Tunes

Tracks:

  1. Witches And Devils
  2. Spirits
  3. Holy, Holy
  4. Saints

Similar Items:

  1. Love Cry
  2. Live In Greenwich Village: The Complete Impulse Recordings
  3. Point of Departure
  4. Spiritual Unity
  5. Unit Structures

Customer Reviews:

3 out of 5 stars Ayler's vision finally beings to come forth........2005-09-13

In 1964, Albert Ayler returned to the United States after some time in the Scandanavian countries and found himself in a recording studio in New York City. Ayler recorded two albums that day, "Goin' Home" and "Spirits" (sometimes released as "Witches and Devils")-- the former all traditionals and spirituals, the latter all originals. Both have their merits, and make for interesting listens together. They both benefit from actually having a band that is sympathetic to Ayler's vision. And certainly, these two albums set the stage for the rest of his career.

"Witches & Devils" as its referred to on this release, is really something altogether shocking. Ayler, performing exclusively on tenor, is accompanied by trumpeter Norman Howard, bassists Henry Grimes and Earl Henderson, and drummer Sunny Murray. The quartet performs by and large in the forms that Ayler would embrace for the next several years-- spiritual/march infused theme statements composed by Ayler with free associative backgrounds and strong melody statements. Improv is powerful and at times seemingly chaotic. Ayler for his part has embraced his sound fully, with a wide vibrato and aggressive approach, playing in his horn's upper register. Howard emulates this, playing with an equally wide vibrato. The rhythm section (only the cut "Witches and Devils" features both bassists, Henderson plays "Holy Holy" and Grimes "Spirits" and "Saints") is all over the place-- Murray frames everything in his inimitable fashion, playing even further away from a timekeeping role than he did with Cecil Taylor, and both Grimes and Henderson are exploratory underneath the horns.

The pieces cover a lot of moods-- "Witches and Devils" is morose, almos funereal, with an extended and unnervingly patient improv led largely by Howard. This spills into the galloping "Spirits", where the horns furiously push out notes in a frantic improv glued together by Sunny Murray's magnificent drumming. Oddly enough, Henderson seems more or less at a loss for what to do with so little space to fill until his own frantic solo comes forth. "Holy Holy" continues this thread, with Ayler stating the theme and consuming about half the piece with his solo. Curiously, at the end of his solo (around the five minute mark), Ayler states part of the theme to his composition "Ghosts" and Howard takes over the soloing voice. The record pretty much fizzles out curiously enough on "Saints", where it seems as if Howard really has no idea how he should be responding to Ayler's playing. Even his own solo seems tentative and incomplete.

Still, three of four tracks are quite good, and while the recording isn't essential in Ayler's catalog, it certainly is a good one.

5 out of 5 stars Class.......2005-09-08

This is pure class, Ayler was a true tortured innovator. His music should not be allowed to die: this conjures up the magic of spirituality with the hungry tone of a true artist.

5 out of 5 stars Free Jazz at its best.......2002-02-05

My favorite Ayler's album. So inspired ! And never "heavy" as in so many poor free jazz recording.

5 out of 5 stars The Start of Something Great.......2001-03-04

After a mediocre debut recording, Albert Ayler's sophomore effort "Witches & Devils" finds the iconoclastic tenor saxophonist truly hitting his stride and forging his signature avant-garde meets gospel style. Joining Ayler on this February 24, 1964 session are trumpeter Norman Howard, bassists Henry Grimes and Earle Henderson, and drummer Sunny Murray. The four tunes featured here would all become Ayler staples, and in some cases, variations on these themes would become the building blocks for other Ayler compositions. In three short months, Ayler would blow the roof off the house that jazz built with the classic "Spiritual Unity," but "Witches & Devils" is where the seeds of the new jazz revolution were planted.

Music CD:

  1. Instant Party ~ Gene Harris
  2. Une Chance pour l'Ombre ~ Kazue Sawai, Michel Doneda, Kazuo Imai, Le Quan Ninh
  3. Swings the Sammy Cahn Songbook ~ Ralph Sharon
  4. Swing and Sway with Sammy Kaye: 21 of His Greatest Hits ~ Sammy Kaye
  5. Third Season ~ Hank Mobley
  6. Russ Morgan & His Orchestra Play 22 Original Big Band Recordings ~ Russ Morgan & His Orchestra
  7. 1, 2, To the Bass ~ Stanley Clarke
  8. Ice Scape ~ Reuben Brown, Rufus Reid, Billy Hart
  9. Caravan: With the Duke Ellington All-Stars and the Billy Strayhorn All-Stars ~ The Johnny Hodges All-Stars
  10. All I Want for Christmas ~ Slim Man

Music CD

Music CD

Music CD

We Bubblin ~ CCH

Forever ~ DJ Revolution , Rasheed , and Chief Kamachi

Kick Out the Jams ~ MC5

Alive on Planet Earth ~ The Flower Kings

Everything ~ Victim

Fairy Light Nights: Live Acoustic ~ All About Eve

Double Wide Double High ~ Leisureworld

I Want to Be Where You Are ~ Roy-C

Thinking of You [CD-Single] ~ Tony! Toni! Tone!

Presents Ghetto Stories ~ Swizz Beatz