Lotus Sutra Buddhist Garden in Parigné l'Evêque : Lotus Sutra Recitation with Albert Ayler Playlist 5

Saddharma-Pundarika or The Lotus of the True Law, translated by H. Kern The Dover Publications, Inc. edition, which served as the source for this video, was first published in 1963, as an unabridged and unaltered republication of the work first published by Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1884, as Volume XXI of "The Sacred Books of the East." On Albert Ayler's 1963 debut, My Name Is Albert Ayler, the reedy slurs of his “Summertime” announced a fresh new voice on tenor, his sharp tones creating new possibilities for expressing the blues. A year later, when he cut Spiritual Unity with a grooving band, his roiling playing was more authoritative, and the melodies embedded in his long suite “Bells (Live)” show how he used motifs to anchor free-jazz flights. Even when switching to alto on “For John Coltrane,” his potency is unmistakable; after Trane's death, Ayler helped carry the torch for groundbreaking jazz exploration.

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