This double CD from 1998 combines all of the music on tenor saxophonist Albert Ayler's In Greenwich Village recording with a two-album set from the same sessions, titled The Village Concerts . In addition, there is one number from 1965, originally included on the sampler The New Wave in Jazz, and a previously unissued Universal Thoughts from the 1967 date, one of the very few examples of Ayler using a trombonist . Teamed up with brother Donald Ayler on trumpet, violinist Michel Sampson, occasional cellist Joel Freedman, two bassists , and drummer Beaver Harris, Ayler uses simple march-like melodies, which could have come from 1905, as the basis for his improvisations, which often become quite violent. Among the pieces are Truth Is Marching In, Spirits Rejoice, Angels , For John Coltrane, and Change Has Come. Donald Ayler's bugle-like fanfares and the droning violin certainly make the ensemble's sound quite unique.