His most well-known works are Ferganskaya syuita Lola and the vocal-symphonic poem Tanovar; the latter of which is based on the Uzbek folk song Kora soch.
In 1931, he graduated from the Moscow Conservatory in the composition class of N.Y. Myaskovsky and studied counterpoint and strict style under N. S. Zhilyayev, and instrumentation under S.N.
In Tashkent, Kozlovsky met Anna Akhmatova, with whom he maintained a creative and friendly relationship until the end of her life.
[4][5] According to the musicologist N. Yudin, Kozlovsky as a conductor was particularly close to works of a lyrical-romantic and lyrical-tragic nature, such as those of Franck, Scriabin, and Tchaikovsky.
The breadth of melodic breath, the organic development, the figurative relief, and sometimes pictorial qualities are the characteristics that distinguish the conductor's interpretation.
On October 15, 2015, a conference dedicated to the 110th anniversary of A. F. Kozlovsky's birth occurred at the Russian Center for Science and Culture in Tashkent"[8]