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Saturday November 10, 2007 at 09:16 AM |
MY NAME IS ALBERT AYLER

“If people don’t like it now, they will.”
“One of the most starkly beautiful and moving
documentaries ever made about a jazz musician.” Jazz Times (USA)
MY NAME IS ALBERT AYLER is a documentary about the prophetic free jazz saxophonist Ayler, who today is seen as one of the most important innovators in jazz. Ayler was obsessed with his radical music and by the thought that people one day would understand it, as he said in his own words “If people don't like it now, they will." In 1962 he recorded his first album in Sweden. Eight years later he was found dead in New York's East River, aged 34.
The documentary follows the trail of Albert from his native town of Cleveland by way of Sweden to New York, meeting family, friends and colleagues who help tell the story of his life and music. Albert himself guides us with his voice and music. Seven years in the making, the film includes newly discovered footage of Ayler and his band.
Check out the recent reviews!
New York Times
http://movies.nytimes.com/2007/11/08/movies/08ayle.html?ref=movies
The New Yorker
http://www.newyorker.com/arts/reviews/film/my_name_is_albert_ayler_collin
Village Voice
http://www.villagevoice.com/film/0745,hillis,78265,20.html
New York Sun
http://www.nysun.com/article/65994
Flavorpill recommends! http://flavorpill.com/newyork/events/2007/11/8/my-name-is-albert-ayler
Gawker recommends! http://gawker.com/news/gawker-calendar/albert-ayler-mariko-mori-and-conans-writers-320616.php
"An extraordinary portrait of an extraordinary musician…Something of a triumph ... manages to bring its austere subject alive, turning Ayler's short, turbulent life into a compelling narrative. ... shows that, underneath the brash, proto-punk tone of Ayler's saxophone, there was a real heart." - SIGHT & SOUND
"During his cruelly short lifetime, tenor saxophonist Albert Ayler, who died at the age of 34 in 1970, often claimed that his tumultuous, spiritual form of free jazz would be understood by audiences only after he died. ... A loving and elegantly crafted documentary that charts the saxophonist's commitment to his art … His music, which this film will make you wish to run out and hear, is the sound of a pack of lions unleashed."- DAILY TELEGRAPH
"An excellent documentary film… about artistic integrity in the face of poverty, and of commitment to a musical vision." - THE GUARDIAN
“a tender and slightly unsettling love letter to iconic avant-garde saxophonist Albert Ayler” - TIME OUT (CRITIC’S CHOICE)
“Collin's film is a haunting mesh of old cine footage, paint-stripping live performances and interviews with surviving friends and family. A strange shot of a semi-naked Ayler, staring silently into the camera, threads through the film, as if the subject is daring you to dismiss him …” THE SUNDAY TIMES
A loving and elegantly crafted documentary that charts the saxophonist's commitment to his art … His music, which this film will make you wish to run out and hear, is the sound of a pack of lions unleashed." - DAILY TELEGRAPH (Sukhdev Sandhu)
"By turns illuminating and heartbreaking … completely alters the way you hear and feel the music." -THE WIRE MAGAZINE
“Heartbreaking as it is, this film is a rarity and not to be missed.”-ALL ABOUT JAZZ (USA)
Anthology Film Archives:
http://www.anthologyfilmarchives.org/schedule/search/film/?id=8534


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