For me the only way I can thank God for his ever-present creation is to offer him a new music impressed of a beauty which nobody had previously understood …. the music we play is one long prayer, a message coming from God.
~ Albert Ayler





For me the only way I can thank God for his ever-present creation is to offer him a new music impressed of a beauty which nobody had previously understood …. the music we play is one long prayer, a message coming from God.
~ Albert Ayler





Now we can approach traditional music in terms of its structure, aiming to pinpoint as many of its musical characteristics as we can, so that we can classify it, through analysis, correlation of derived facts, and so on and so forth. This is a valid approach, which has its place in the scheme of things. But apart from the fact it would be of real interest only to professional musicians, I have always thought its value was greatly over-rated.
For an analytical approach can give us, at best, only the anatomy and physiology of the music considered; it can tell us nothing about the informing life of the music, nothing about its essence, nothing of what it meant to its creators and why, and at the end we are left with the mere skeleton of what was a living art.
But we can also approach traditional music in terms of its function rather than its structure; its content, rather than its form; its purpose and meaningfulness, rather than its size and shape, always aiming to relate it to the tradition from which it sprang, and the day-to-day life of the people who gave it birth. At once we find ourselves facing a vast canvas, full of symbols; some of these are relatively easy to decipher; others are not so easy; still others appear to be weird hieroglyphs which may well defy all our efforts to fathom.
~ Fela Sowande





I believe that most of what was said of God was in reality said of that Spirit whose body is Earth.
~ George Russell





“There is never any end… There are always new sounds to imagine; new feelings to get at. And always, there is the need to keep purifying these feelings and sounds so that we can really see what we’ve discovered in its pure state. So that we can see more and more clearly what we are. In that way, we can give those who listen the essence, the best of what we are. But to do that at each stage we have to keep on cleaning the mirror.”
~ John Coltrane





Do nothing for effect. Do it for truth.
~ Nadia Boulanger
Limited 3 of 3 Super VHS versions for those in need of accentuated analog repair…




The whole thing of being in music is not to control it but to be swept away by it. If you’re swept away by it you can’t wait to do it again and the same magical moments always come.
~ Bobby Hutcherson
for Alland Byallo and Manuel Göttsching…
Limited 3 of 3 Super VHS versions for those in need of accentuated analog repair…



