Taylor's age and his death at home in Brooklyn
were confirmed by Adam Wilner, his legal guardian, the newspaper
said. Although there was no cause was given for his death, his
friends said he had been in failing health, it said.
Wilner could not be reached for comment.
The New York Office of Chief Medical Examiner could not
immediately confirm Taylor's death.
A classically trained jazz musician, Taylor wrote music, led
bands and played in countless nightclubs and music festivals in
a career that spanned about six decades.
His entry into the New York jazz scene in the 1950s was less
than welcoming, because, as the late jazz critic Nat Hentoff
wrote, "many renowned musicians didn't hear any melody or
sense."
Refusing to compromise on his preferred improvisational,
free-form style, which was still in its infancy in the jazz
world, Taylor found himself having to work as a cook,
dishwasher, coffee shop deliveryman and record salesman to make
ends meet.
"But when he found actual audiences, he sometimes electrified
them," Hentoff wrote in 2002. "Throughout his life in jazz,
Cecil continues to spellbind or infuriate listeners."
Cecil Percival Taylor was born in New York's borough of Queens
on March 25, 1929, to middle-class parents who guided his
musical education once it became clear that he was not
interested in pursuing a professional career.
He studied piano at the New York College of Music, and later
attended the New England Conservatory in Boston, where he
studied the works of composers including Stravinsky, Bartok and
Elliott Carter.
He recorded his first album, "Jazz Advance," in 1956 with a
quartet with which he played at the Newport Jazz Festival the
following year. On his next record, "Looking Ahead!" in 1958,
Taylor played with a group that included the legendary
saxophonist John Coltrane.
Among the notable venues for his performances were the White
House under President Jimmy Carter and a series of concerts in
East and West Berlin in 1988.
(Reporting by Peter Szekely, editing by G Crosse)
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