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Recent Articles
Recent Articles by Michael Fox
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National Features >
Broward-Palm Beach New Times
Do black voters need to get over their homophobia?
By Bob Norman
Riverfront Times
The American Mustache Institute works to make facial hair hip again.
By Matt Kasper
Village Voice
Welcome to America, freedom fighters. Now go home.
By Elizabeth Dwoskin
Seattle Weekly
How a Seattle man made a killing off the misery of local homeowners.
By Nina Shapiro
Miles Ahead
Published on February 29, 2008 at 4:20am
The Biblical proverb that a prophet is without honor in his own home goes a ways toward explaining why the young saxophonist Albert Ayler split for Sweden in the early 1960s. Stockholm was a whole lot freer than Ayler's native Cleveland, yet audiences proved to be only slightly more accepting of his dissonant, full-throttle style of play. An early proponent of free jazz, Ayler rejected melody and tempo in favor of feel. He was uncompromising, like so many pioneers, to the point of destruction. Swedish director Kasper Collin's invaluable and elegiac documentary, My Name is Albert Ayler, suggests that the path-breaking sax man found his voice in the Land of the Midnight Sun, but could only make his mark in the Big Apple. Ayler bonded with Coltrane in New York (ultimately playing at his funeral), made records that divided critics and jazz fans, and in 1970 mysteriously drowned himself in the East River at age 34. Collin, who will be present at all screenings, has crafted an inspiring, heartrending, and mysterious saga of artistic integrity and familial loyalty. Above all, it is the quintessential portrait of an artist who was ahead of his time -- and knew it.
Sun., March 23, 2, 4, 7:15 & 9:15 p.m., 2008