Welcome to Sound Projections

I'm your host Kofi Natambu. This online magazine features the very best in contemporary creative music in this creative timezone NOW (the one we're living in) as well as that of the historical past. The purpose is to openly explore, examine, investigate, reflect on, studiously critique, and take opulent pleasure in the sonic and aural dimensions of human experience known and identified to us as MUSIC. I'm also interested in critically examining the wide range of ideas and opinions that govern our commodified notions of the production, consumption, marketing, and commercial exchange of organized sound(s) which largely define and thereby (over)determine our present relationships to music in the general political economy and culture.

Thus this magazine will strive to critically question and go beyond the conventional imposed notions and categories of what constitutes the generic and stylistic definitions of ‘Jazz’, ‘classical music’, ‘Blues.’ 'Rhythm and Blues’, ‘Rock and Roll’, ‘Pop’, ‘Funk’, ‘Hip Hop’, etc. in order to search for what individual artists and ensembles do cretively to challenge and transform our ingrained ideas and attitudes of what music is and could be.

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Saturday, February 10, 2024

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https://soundprojections.blogspot.com/2018/03/alice-coltrane-1937-2007-legendary.html  

PHOTO:  ALICE COLTRANE (1937-2007)



Pianist, composer, arranger, and harpist who added colors and textures to the expansive, constantly shifting forefront of avant-garde jazz.
 

Alice Coltrane 

(1937-2007) 

Biography by Thom Jurek

A Monastic Trio  

Alice Coltrane Turiyasangitananda ("Turiya") was an American jazz pianist, organist, harpist, composer, vocalist, and swamini. After establishing herself as a canny bop and hard bop pianist on the fertile Detroit scene of the late 1950s, she studied with Bud Powell in Paris during the early '60s. She met saxophonist John Coltrane in 1963, and they were married two years later. Alice was his primary musical collaborator during his final period. After his death in 1967, she issued her solo debut, A Monastic Trio, for Impulse! in 1968, playing both piano and harp. Coltrane released seven albums for Impulse! between 1968 and 1972. Among them are Ptah, The El Daoud, Journey in Satchidananda, and the landmark Universal Consciousness and World Galaxy, employing chamber and orchestral strings from various disciplines in addition to jazz musicians. In 1972, she abandoned secular life, moved to California, and studied with Hindu gurus Swami Satchidananda and Sathya Sai Baba. She established The Vedantic Center in Los Angeles in 1975, and signed with Warner Bros., releasing three studio albums with the label including that year's Eternity and the live double album Transfiguration in 1978. Coltrane changed her name to Turiyasangitananda (nicknamed Turiya) and was appointed swamini of Sai Anantam Ashram. She only recorded one more album, 1995's Translinear Light for Verve, produced by son Ravi Coltrane. She died in 2007.

She was born Alice McLeod in Detroit to Solon and Annie McLeod, the fifth of six children. Her mother was a pianist and sang in the church choir. Alice began studying piano with a neighbor at age seven. Two years later, she was playing organ during services at Mount Olive Baptist church. Her piano and organ playing inspired the congregation to sponsor her music education at a community school. McLeod attended Detroit's prestigious Cass Technical High School, where she studied classical music and played percussion in the marching band. Thanks to the encouragement of her father and her half brother, saxophonist-turned-bassist Ernie Farrow, she began studying jazz along with two notable classmates, pianist Hugh Lawson and drummer Earl Williams. She started leading her own group called the Premiers, performing gospel, jazz, and rhythm & blues standards; members included trombonist George Bohanon, bassist Anthony Jackson, and drummer Oliver Jackson. She also got work on the Motor City's vibrant jazz scene with Yusef Lateef, Kenny Burrell, and others.

The reason McLeod stood out, even on a scene that boasted world-class talent such as Barry Harris and Teddy Wilson, was her playing style. Dense with arpeggios and expansive clustered chords, her piano playing suggested the harp. She was deeply influenced by harpist Dorothy Ashby, the first person to employ the instrument in bebop. Ashby's harp playing not only informed Alice's pianism but influenced her to take up the harp later on. In 1959, she moved to Paris briefly, where she studied informally with Bud Powell and served as intermission pianist at the Blue Note club. While serving in that capacity, she appeared on French television in the company of Lucky Thompson, Pierre Michelot, and Kenny Clarke. She met jazz singer Kenneth "Poncho" Hagood in Paris. They married, had a daughter (Michelle), and moved to New York in 1960. However, the marriage was short-lived due to Hagood's growing dependency on heroin.

Alice and Michelle returned to Detroit, where Alice continued playing jazz with her own trio and in a duo with vibraphonist Terry Pollard. In 1962 to 1963, she returned to New York as a member of Terry Gibbs' quartet playing vibraphone and piano. (They issued the co-billed 1963 album El Nutto for Mercury.) During that time, she met John Coltrane, and they connected instantly. The pair began living and traveling together, and in 1964 they had settled on Long Island. They married in 1965 in Juárez, Mexico, after Coltrane's divorce from first wife, Naima Grubbs.

Live at the Village Vanguard Again!  

By then, Alice had joined John's "New Thing" quintet with drummer Rashied Ali, saxophonist Pharoah Sanders, and bassist Jimmy Garrison, and released Live at the Village Vanguard Again! in 1966 and Concert in Japan from the same tour. Alice's playing is characterized by rhythmically fluid arpeggios and a pulsing, sometimes droning modal textural facility. The set proved controversial with (primarily white, male) jazz critics, who tended to dislike change. She also played on subsequent studio sessions released posthumously as Expression and Stellar Regions.

Though Alice had always been a deeply spiritual person, John introduced her to Eastern philosophy and religions, which became her life's primary focus shortly thereafter. Before his death, he assisted her in signing a solo contract with Impulse! After her husband's death from liver cancer in 1967, Coltrane took a vow of celibacy.

Huntington Ashram Monastery  

With four young children to feed, she wasted no time getting back to work. In January 1968, while preparing to release her debut album for Impulse!, she revisited the unissued San Francisco sessions and added two tracks recorded by her own group, "Lord, Help Me to Be" and "The Sun," featuring Garrison and drummer Ben Riley, with Sanders appearing on tenor sax and flute. The set was initially issued by Coltrane Records in September as Cosmic Music. Alice's debut, A Monastic Trio with Riley and Garrison was released in December, less than two months after Cosmic Music appeared -- it was re-released by Impulse! the following year, a few months after Coltrane issued her second album, Huntington Ashram Monastery, another trio offering with Ron Carter on bass and Rashied Ali on drums.

Christmas and the Beads of Sweat 

In January 1970, she recorded four compositions in her home studio with Riley, Carter, saxophonist Joe Henderson, and Sanders playing bass clarinet. The album, titled Ptah, the El Daoud, was released that September. That same year, she played harp on the sessions for Laura Nyro's Christmas and the Beads of Sweat. Coltrane also met Swami Satchidananda and began studying with him. His impact on her life was profound. She recorded Journey in Satchidananda in November as a reflection of his inspiration. Released in February 1971 with accompaniment by Sanders, Ali, and alternating bassists Charlie Haden, Cecil McBee and Vishnu Wood, it garnered consistently positive reviews.

Peaceful World  

That year also found Coltrane playing harp alongside Carter and flutist Hubert Laws on the track "Little Dove" from the Rascals' Peaceful World. She rediscovered the organ in 1970 while desiring to create a meditative music whose pulse and phrasing would not be interrupted by pauses for breath. Between April and June 1971, Coltrane and her sidemen recorded the sessions that would become Universal Consciousness. Released in September, it showcased Coltrane performing only on the harp and Wurlitzer organ. More than this, however, it showcased her consummate skills as an arranger. She added a string quartet that included Leroy Jenkins to the proceedings, which she composed and arranged alongside a studio trio that included Garrison on bass, and Jack DeJohnette, Clifford Jarvis, and Ali alternating on drums. Ornette Coleman provided string transcriptions for three tracks. Coltrane seamlessly wove together the various strains of her musical thinking that included modal jazz, gospel hymns, blues, Hindi devotional music, and 20th century classical sonorities.

She followed with the even more ambitious World Galaxy in May 1972. In addition to a studio sextet that included saxophonist Frank Lowe, bassist Reggie Workman, Riley on drums, Elayne Jones on timpani, and Jenkins as a soloist, she composed and arranged for a 15-piece orchestral string section directed by concertmaster David Sackson. The album included three original compositions as well as readings of "My Favorite Things" and "A Love Supreme." Some critics took issue with her covers, foolishly questioning their worth in jazz terms. Like Universal Consciousness, World Galaxy is now regarded as a classic, full of brave, new musical thinking.

Infinity  

1972 also saw Coltrane transplant her family to Los Angeles from New York to be closer to her spiritual teachers and their organizations. The Impulse! release of Infinity caused Coltrane to endure extreme vitriol from jazz critics. Its original sessions were recorded at different times. Two tunes --"Living Space" and "Joy" -- were cut in 1965 with the classic quartet of John Coltrane, McCoy Tyner, Elvin Jones, and Garrison. Onto these performances she overdubbed strings and tambouras. The 1966 bookend cuts "Peace on Earth" and "Leo" were performed by the New Thing quintet with Alice on piano, organ, and vibraphone, Ali, Sanders, and percussionist Ray Appleton. In addition to strings, she replaced Garrison's bass parts with newly recorded ones by Charlie Haden, and added new solos of her own playing. Critics and fans howled their displeasure, but Coltrane's response was direct in an interview: "Were you there? Did you hear [John's] commentary and what he had to say?... We had a conversation about every detail; [John] was showing me how the piece could include other sounds, blends, tonalities, and resonances such as strings. He talked about cosmic sounds, higher dimensions, astral levels and other worlds, and realms of music and sound that I could feel."

Lord of Lords  

Coltrane issued her final album for Impulse!, Lord of Lords, in 1972; it capped her orchestral trilogy. Produced by Ed Michel, it showcased the artist playing harp, piano, organ, tympani, and vibes, backed by Haden and Riley above a 20-piece string section that she composed for, arranged, and conducted. In 1974, she was a co-billed featured guest on Joe Henderson's seminal album The Elements, and recorded the one-off Illuminations with Devadip Carlos Santana and saxophonist Jules Broussard.

In 1975, Coltrane founded the Vedanta Center in Los Angeles and signed a recording contract with Warner Bros. The music she issued for the label revealed a deepening of her spiritual resolve and the sole desire to create music that reflected it. Eternity, issued in 1976, offered six tracks, ranging from the harp solo "Wisdom Eye" to "Om Supreme" for electric piano and six singers. Elsewhere, such as on "Spiritual Eternal," her trio with Riley and Haden were joined by reeds, winds, brass, and strings. She also delivered a radical re-envisioning of sections from Igor Stravinsky's Rite of Spring.  

Later that year, she released Radha-Krsna Nama Sankirtana. Forgoing jazz altogether, it offered Hindu devotional songs. Three tracks were chants, with Coltrane's organ and electric piano backing a vocal chorus, while the other two featured her interpretations accompanied by tambora or drums. For decades it was the most misunderstood record in her catalog. 1977's Transcendence followed suit. Coltrane alternately played harp, organ, and Rhodes piano as well as tambora. She was accompanied on half the album by a string quartet and the other half by a large vocal chorus.

Her final date for Warner Bros. was 1978's double-live opus Transfiguration. Recorded in performance at UCLA's Schoenberg Hall in a trio with drummer Roy Haynes and Workman on bass, it offered Coltrane at full intensity playing piano and Wurlitzer organ. The track "Prema" included a nine-piece string section that was overdubbed later in the studio. With the album's release came Coltrane's retreat from public life. She did appear on Marian McPartland's syndicated Piano Jazz program in 1981. She also changed her name to Swami Turiyasangitananda and taught at the Vedantic Center -- and later the Shanti Anantam Ashram (later renamed Sai Anantam Ashram) on 50 acres near Malibu, California. She only recorded devotional Sanskrit hymns (or bhajans) for her congregation. Coltrane self-released a small batch of cassettes including 1982's Turiya Sings, 1987's Divine Songs, 1990's Infinite Chants, and 1995's Glorious Chants. In 1998, she appeared with her sons Ravi and Oran at a John Coltrane tribute concert at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in New York City and again at Joe's Pub in 2002.

She began recording again in 2000 and eventually issued the stellar Translinear Light on the Verve label in 2004. Produced by Ravi, it featured Coltrane on piano, organ, and synthesizer, in a host of playing situations with luminary collaborators that included not only her sons but also Charlie Haden, Jack DeJohnette, Jeff "Tain" Watts, and James Genus. After the release of Translinear Light, she played some selective dates in Paris in 2005, and a three-date tour in the fall of 2006 with Ravi in Ann Arbor, New York, and San Francisco. On January 12, 2007, Coltrane died of respiratory failure at Los Angeles' West Hills Hospital and Medical Center. Her catalog was selectively remastered and reissued in the United States and Japan. 

A decade later, Luaka Bop sought out the original masters of Coltrane's worship cassettes, assisted by her children. Enlisting original engineer Baker Bigsby, the label assembled a compilation from the four tapes. Entitled World Spirituality Classics 1: The Ecstatic Music of Alice Coltrane Turi…, it was released in May 2017 to commemorate her 80th birthday and the tenth anniversary of her passing. The package included a lengthy liner essay by jazz historian Ashley Khan, Mark "Frosty" McNeil's master's thesis, and interviews with family, ashram members, and colleagues. It also included a remembrance by Surya Botofasina in conversation with Andy Beta. In 2018, Real Gone released Spiritual Eternal: The Complete Warner Bros. Studio Recordings. 

In July 2021, Coltrane returned to Impulse! with Kirtan: Turiya Sings. The set reframed her 1982 cassette with a mix that Ravi had only heard for the first time in 2020; he gave his blessing for its release. The original marked the only time Coltrane's singing voice had ever been heard solo on an album, accompanied by synths, organs, and synthesized strings. The 2021 mix offered only her voice accompanied by an organ.


https://www.allmusic.com/artist/alice-coltrane-mn0000006143/biography
 
Alice Coltrane
(1937-2007)
Artist Biography by Chris Kelsey
 
Alice Coltrane was an uncompromising pianist, composer, and bandleader who spent the majority of her life seeking spiritually in both music and her private life. Music ran in Coltrane's family; her older brother was bassist Ernie Farrow, who in the '50s and '60s played in the bands of Barry Harris, Stan Getz, Terry Gibbs, and Yusef Lateef.

Alice McLeod began studying classical music at the age of seven. She attended Detroit's Cass Technical High School with pianist Hugh Lawson and drummer Earl Williams. As a young woman she played in church and was a fine bebop pianist in the bands of such local musicians as Lateef and Kenny Burrell. McLeod traveled to Paris in 1959 to study with Bud Powell. She met John Coltrane while touring and recording with Gibbs around 1962-1963; she married the saxophonist in 1965, and joined his band -- replacing McCoy Tyner -- one year later. Alice stayed with John's band until his death in 1967; on his albums Live at the Village Vanguard Again! and Concert in Japan, her playing is characterized by rhythmically ambiguous arpeggios and a pulsing thickness of texture.

Subsequently, she formed her own bands with players such as Pharoah Sanders, Joe Henderson, Frank Lowe, Carlos Ward, Rashied Ali, Archie Shepp, and Jimmy Garrison. In addition to the piano, Alice also played harp and Wurlitzer organ. She led a series of groups and recorded fairly often for Impulse, including the celebrated albums Monastic Trio, Journey in Satchidananda, Universal Consciousness, and World Galaxy. She then moved to Warner Bros, where she released albums such as Transcendence, Eternity, and her double-live opus Transfiguration in 1978.

Long concerned with spiritual matters, Coltrane (whose spiritual name was "Turiyasangitananda") founded a center for Eastern spiritual study called the Vedanta Center in 1975. She began a long hiatus from public and recorded performance, though her 1981 appearance on Marian McPartland's Piano Jazz radio series was released by Jazz Alliance. In 1987, she led a quartet that included her sons Ravi and Oran in a John Coltrane tribute concert at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in New York City. Coltrane returned to public performance in 1998 at a Town Hall Concert with Ravi and again at Joe's Pub in Manhattan in 2002. 
 
She began recording again in 2000 and eventually issued the stellar Translinear Light on the Verve label in 2004. Produced by Ravi, it featured Coltrane on piano, organ, and synthesizer, in a host of playing situations with luminary collaborators that included not only her sons, but also Charlie Haden, Jack DeJohnette, Jeff "Tain" Watts, and James Genus. After the release of Translinear Light, she began playing live more frequently, including a date in Paris shortly after Hurricane Katrina in 2005, and a brief tour in fall 2006 with Ravi. Coltrane died on January 12, 2007, of respiratory failure at Los Angeles' West Hills Hospital and Medical Center.

During her long time away from the spotlight, Coltrane spent her time and effort on her Vedanta Center. By 1983, she had expanded it to become the 48-acre Sai Anantam Ashram in the Agoura Hills, outside of Los Angeles -- home to a spiritual community. Though she was not active in the jazz world, Coltrane quietly recorded music at the ashram and distributed it to her community's members on four privately pressed -- but professionally recorded -- cassette tapes from the mid-'80s to the mid-'90s: Turiya Sings, Divine Songs, Infinite Chants, and Glorious Chants. The cassettes represented the expressive side of Coltrane's practice, displaying an intensely original sound inspired by the gospel music from the Detroit churches she grew up in, Indian devotional music and chants, and of course, improvisation, played on harp, eastern percussion, synthesizers, organs, and strings (she wrote the arrangements) accompanied by the Sai Antaram Ashram Singers and membership. They also display Coltrane singing for the first time. Luaka Bop sought out the original masters, assisted by Coltrane's children. Enlisting original engineer Baker Bigsby, the label assembled a compilation from the four tapes. Entitled World Spirituality Classics 1: The Ecstatic Music of Alice Coltrane Turiyasangitananda, it was released in May of 2017 to commemorate both her 80th birthday and in remembrance of the tenth anniversary of her death. The package included a lengthy liner essay by jazz historian Ashley Khan, Mark "Frosty" McNeil's Master's thesis, interviews with family, ashram members, and colleagues, and a remembrance by Surya Botofasina in conversation with Andy Beta

 

 Alice Coltrane

For more than five decades, the Coltrane name remains at the forefront of modern music. It is lauded throughout the United States as well as internationally where it has received great acclaim. The musical offerings cover an eclectic variety of artistic expressions recorded on ABC Impulse, Warner Bros., and Impulse- Universal.

She was born and raised in the religious family of Solon and Anne McLeod in Detroit, Michigan, once hailed as a major musical capitol. Alice became interested in music and began her study of the piano at the age of seven. She consistently and diligently practiced and studied classical music. Subsequently, she enrolled in a more advanced study of the music of Rachmaninoff, Beethoven, Stravinsky and Tschaikowsky. She once said: “Classical music for me, was an extensive, technical study for many years. At that time, I discovered it to be a truly profound music with a highly intellectual ambiance. I will always appreciate it with a kind remembrance and great esteem. Subsequent to the completion of her studies, she said, “The classical artist must respectfully recreate the composer's meaning. Although, with jazz music, you are allowed to develop your own creativity, improvisation and expression. This greatly inspires me.”

She graduated from high school with a scholarship to the Detroit Institute of Technology; however, her musical achievements began to echo throughout the city, to the extent that she played in many music halls, choirs and churches, for various occasions as weddings, funerals, and religious programs. Her skills and abilities were highly enhanced when she began playing piano and organ for the gospel choir, and for the junior and senior choirs at her church. In later years, she would further her musical attributes by including organ, harp and synthesizer to her accomplishments.

After moving to New York in the early sixties, Alice met and married John Coltrane, the great creator of avant-garde music and genius and master of the tenor and soprano saxophones. His parents were very spiritual, and dedicated to service in the church in which his father faithfully served. John's mother, Mrs. Alice Coltrane, Sr, was a fine singer. He was blessed to have them as his parents.

The innovative, futuristic sounds of the Coltrane musical heritage have set a new pace for modern music that sounded the unstruck chord throughout the world. And it resounded in the hearts of many people creating a legacy that will not soon be forgotten. The vision they shared became a bright effulgence from the lighthouse of polyphonic, ethereal, universal sound, bringing clarity and understanding of the music and enhancing appreciation of it to the people. 
 

Alice Coltrane: The Legacy Of A Pioneering Female Jazz Musician

With a cosmic sense of vision and a passionate interest in spirituality, Alice Coltrane left a formidable musical legacy that more than stands on its own

by Charles Waring
August 27, 2023
Udiscovermusic
Alice Coltrane
Photo: Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

The Coltrane name is familiar to people who know little – or even nothing – of jazz. Saxophonist/composer John Coltrane was one of the genre’s key figures, and his talismanic name, iconic reputation, and stellar music has transcended the jazz idiom that bore him. But what the public at large probably don’t know is there are two significant Coltranes in the history of jazz. The other was John’s wife, Alice Coltrane, born on August 27, 1937.

Cosmic music


"Manifestation"
Verve, 1969

Percussion: Ray Appleton
Drums: Rashied Ali
Bass: Jimmy Garrison
Tenor Saxophone: Pharoah Sanders
Piano: Alice Coltrane
Composer Lyricist: John Coltrane

Alice Coltrane’s career as a solo artist didn’t begin until her husband’s ended, when he died from cancer, aged 40, on July 17, 1967. Her first formal release came the following year, with the 1968 album Cosmic Music, on which she was jointly credited with her late husband and added overdubbed orchestral arrangements to some of his studio performances. The album made clear that Alice – a classically-trained pianist originally from Detroit and who’d been in John’s band between 1965 and ’67 – vowed to carry on her husband’s mission of making music that was driven by an earnest quest to explore the intersection of human and divine love.

Her first solo album proper, A Monastic Trio, also released in 1968 on her husband’s former label, Impulse!, showcased Alice playing harp as well as piano on a series of songs that melded hypnotic modal vamps with pronounced blues and gospel inflections. And, over the course of six other highly-regarded albums for Impulse!, released between 1968 and 1973, Alice went on sonic voyages of self-discovery that explored new territory in spiritual jazz.

Astral meditation

Journey In Satchidananda

Verve, 1971

Percussion and Soprano saxophone: Pharoah Sanders
Tambura: Tulsi
Bass: Cecil McBee 
Bass: Charlie Haden
Bells, Tambourine: Majid Shabazz
Drums: Rashied Ali 
Piano and Harp: Alice Coltrane
Composer: Alice Coltrane
Producer: Alice Coltrane
 

Via her inspirational early 70s records such as Journey In Satchidananda (featuring Pharoah Sanders), World Galaxy, and Lord Of Lords, Alice Coltrane patented a uniquely personal style of spiritual jazz that was defined by cascading harp glissandi, highly percussive piano playing, swirling clouds of organ, and lush symphonic orchestral arrangements. This rich musical tapestry was underpinned and unified by a cosmic sense of vision and a passionate interest in spirituality and Eastern religion.

These spiritual concerns would eventually lead Alice to leave the music business altogether, following a three-album stint at Warner Bros in the late 70s, to focus on living a devout life in a Californian Ashram, where she became a spiritual director of its Vedantic Center. Alice continued to make music during this time – under the name Alice Coltrane Turiyasangitananda – albeit on a sporadic basis.

Though Alice lived in quiet obscurity for many years, by the late 90s, hip-hop had brought her back into the public eye. Cypress Hill famously sampled her 1972 track “Galaxy In Olodumare” on their 1993 hit “I Ain’t Goin’ Out Like That,” and, throughout the decade, her music was also a source of inspiration for The Beatnuts and Sneaker Pimps.

The late 90s saw the release of Astral Meditation: The Music Of Alice Coltrane, a compilation which drew on her Impulse! tenure. For those unfamiliar with Alice Coltrane’s work, it represents a fine introduction, though it’s hard to find now. 2006’s The Impulse! Story is, however, still in print, while for those who prefer their music on vinyl, a rare 1973 double-album compilation, Reflection On Creation And Space (A Five Year View), will reward those who are able to hunt it down.


Blue Nile
Impulse label, 1970
 
Blue Nile · Alice Coltrane 
Ptah The El Daoud  


Track listing:

  1. "Ptah, the El Daoud" – 13:58
  2. "Turiya and Ramakrishna" – 8:19
  3. "Blue Nile" – 6:58
  4. "Mantra" – 16:33

All tracks composed by Alice Coltrane, and recorded at the Coltrane home studio in Dix Hills, New York on 26 January 1970.

ALICE COLTRANE QUINTET:

  
Harp: Alice Coltrane  Bass: Ron Carter  Percussion: Ben Riley Associated Performer, Alto Flute: Pharoah Sanders Alto Flute: Joe Henderson 
Composer Lyricist: Alice Coltrane
 

A formidable musical legacy

In 2004, Alice was coaxed out of retirement to record a new album for Impulse!, Translinear Light, produced by her saxophone-playing son, Ravi Coltrane. Sadly, it proved to be her last. Three years later, on January 12, 2007, she passed away at the age of 69.

Since then, Alice Coltrane’s music has continued to grow in stature, with a steady stream of reissues confirming a growing public interest in her work. The samples have continued, too, with Flying Lotus, in particular, revealing himself to be a keen disciple by re-using snippets from her songs for his own records. (Born Steven Ellison, the producer is Alice Coltrane’s grand-nephew.)

Alice Coltrane’s influence is not just restricted to record producers. Her music has permeated a new generation of jazz musicians with spiritual inclinations, including acclaimed US saxophonist Kamasi Washington and rising UK group Maisha, who both carry her musical DNA.

Looking for more featuring Alice Coltrane? Dive deep into the story of spiritual jazz.

 

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http://thequietus.com/articles/22328-alice-coltrane-review-john-coltrane

The Strange World Of... Alice Coltrane
by Stewart Smith
May 3rd, 2017
The Quietus

Stewart Smith takes a look at the astounding back catalogue of Alice Coltrane and finds ten points of entry for the curious



Alice Coltrane is one of the greatest artists of the 20th century, with a sublime musical vision that encompasses jazz, blues, gospel, Indian classical, North African music, and European modernism. Although her achievement is now being recognised, for many years Coltrane was misunderstood and dismissed by many of jazz’s gatekeepers. Some viewed her in the way many view Yoko Ono: responsible for the break-up of her husband John Coltrane’s classic quintet; a sexist and demonstrably untrue claim. 

Others simply didn’t get what her music was about, dismissing it as so much hippy twaddle. As the normally on-point Richard Cook writes in his Jazz Encyclopedia, "Her albums of her own music often come across as soft-headed and incoherent rambling… one wonders if she would have enjoyed any attention at all if she had remained plain Alice McLeod." 

Such wrong-headed attitudes are thankfully on the wane. Coltrane was hugely respected by the heavyweight musicians she worked with, who were clearly less hung up on genre boundaries than many critics. Her music has always attracted open-minded music fans - Journey In Satchidananda is one of the cult albums – but in recent years it has enjoyed a new lease of life, with Radiohead, Four Tet and Sunn 0))) among the acts paying homage.
The Los Angeles beats & jazz community centred around her nephew Stephen Ellison, aka Flying Lotus, has played a key role in raising her profile, and there’s undoubtedly a heady whiff of Alice in Kamasi Washington’s symphonic jazz arrangements. She’s also a major influence on contemporary jazz innovators like Joshua Abrams and Amirtha Kidambi, who clearly respond to her unorthodox approach. 

Born in Detroit in 1937, the young Alice McLeod was a musical prodigy, learning piano from an early age, and playing organ in Mount Olive Baptist Church by the age of nine. Gospel remained a great love and its influence can be heard throughout her work. In her teens, she discovered bebop through her older half-brother, the bassist Ernie Farrow, and was entranced. Before she was twenty, she had gigged with saxophonists Cannonball Adderley and Sonny Stitt. She later moved to Paris where she studied piano with the great Bud Powell. She returned to the US after her first marriage ended, where she played with vibist Terry Gibbs (she appears on his 1963 album Plays Jewish Melodies In Jazztime) who introduced her to John Coltrane in 1963. 

He was her soulmate and collaborator, and together they had four children before John’s untimely death from liver cancer in 1967. Her music and spirituality helped her overcome the trauma of losing her husband at 30, and in 1968 she released the first of her twenty solo albums, the beautiful A Monastic Trio

In the 1970s, she became a disciple of Swami Satchidananda (the guru who opened Woodstock) and took on the name Turiyasangitananda. She soon became a spiritual leader herself, opening the Vedantic Centre in 1975, and the Sai Anantam Ashram eight years later. As a result, she drifted away from the music business, although she continued to record devotional music for her community. Those recordings enjoy their first commercial release with the new compilation on Luaka Bop, The Ecstatic Music Of Alice Coltrane Turiyasangitananda; a real cause for celebration. Before her death in 2007, she returned to the studio for one final album proper, the wonderful Translinear Light. Read on, as we unpack her legacy. 

 
Something About John Coltrane 


Alice Coltrane joined her husband’s band in 1966, recording a number of studio sessions including the final album released during his lifetime, Expression, and the posthumously released Stellar Regions. She also appeared on several live recordings, including Offering: Live At Temple University, a phenomenal set recorded in Philadelphia in 1966, but only released in 2015. Alice’s piano playing on these albums is less flashily virtuosic than McCoy Tyner’s, but it’s highly distinctive nonetheless, with the extended harmonies, rippling modal lines and driving bass she would develop further on her own albums. She hooks up beautifully with bassist Jimmy Garrison and drummer Rashied Ali, riding the latter’s multi-directional flow, while providing rhythmic and harmonic anchors when necessary. She more than proves herself of being willing and able to follow her husband on his ecstatic journeys to the outer reaches.

Following John’s death in 1967, Alice founded the independent Coltrane Records to release the jointly credited Cosmic Music, featuring two 1966 tracks by the John Coltrane Quintet, and two new pieces she had recorded with her first quartet (with Pharoah Sanders, Jimmy Garrison and Ben Riley) at her Long Island home studio in 1968. Highlights include John’s ‘Reverend King’, where a light, folkish melody erupts into a wild collective improvisation, and Alice’s ‘The Sun’, a modal piano piece that opens with a spoken word invocation recorded by her husband and Sanders in 1966. By pairing her own music with her husband’s, Alice announced her intention to continue on the visionary path they had mapped out together. That approach met with some controversy, not least in 1972, when Alice added string, organ and bass overdubs to two 1966 tracks to create half of the John Coltrane album Infinity. Jazz purists cried blasphemy, but as Alice repeatedly pointed out, the project was a realisation of her and John’s original vision. As she told The Wire magazine in 2002, "We had a conversation about every detail; [John] was showing me how the piece could include other sounds, blends, tonalities and resonances such as strings. He talked about cosmic sounds, higher dimensions, astral levels and other worlds, and realms of music and sound that I could feel." The results are fascinating and rather gorgeous, offering a glimpse where John might have gone next had he lived.


The Harp


Towards the end of his life, John Coltrane decided to buy a harp, hoping that the instrument would help him rethink his approach to harmony and texture. The harp took months to build and wasn’t delivered to the family home until after his death. Alice would later recall how, if the windows were open, a strong breeze would make the harp’s strings hum, as if it was being played by some invisible force. She soon mastered the instrument, developing the dreamy rippling style that can be heard on ensemble recordings and beautiful solo pieces like ‘Wisdom Eye’ from 1976’s Eternity. This sublime live clip captures her solo harp playing in all its glory; if your eyes are still dry by the end of it, there is no hope for you. 


New Beginnings


Alice Coltrane’s solo debut Monastic Trio (1968) is one of her finest, confidently establishing her compositional voice with a series of tunes that combine Easter modes with blues and gospel tonalities. As the sole lead instrumentalist, Coltrane plays the shit out of the piano, particularly on ‘Ohnedaruth’ and ‘Gospel Trane’, where she brings her rippling, harp-like phrasing to complex modal structures. The gracefulness of her right-hand playing is underpinned by a gutsy sense of swing that reflects her gospel and bebop roots. The harp makes its first outing on Side B, as Coltrane conjures shimmering clouds of tone over Garrison’s exploratory bass (I’ll even wager that ‘Lovely Sky Boat’ is an influence on Parliament’s simultaneously sublime and ridiculous ‘Silent Boatman’, with its ‘Skye Boat Song’ references and luscious harp). 

The following year’s Huntington Ashram Monastery is an equally fine trio outing, with Rashied Ali on drums and erstwhile Miles Davis bassist Ron Carter stepping in for Garrison. 1970’s Ptah, The El Daoud offers an expanded sound, replacing Ali with Riley, and bringing in Sanders and Joe Henderson on saxophones and flute. It’s a stone-cold classic. Carter and Riley are a more in-the-pocket rhythm section than Garrison and Ali, providing a solid, funky backbone for the title track’s expansive Egyptian strut. Henderson’s warm, hip style contrasts nicely with Sander’s weirder expressions, while Coltrane dazzles with undulating piano leads and strident gospel riffs. ‘Turiya And Ramakrishna’ is a deeply soulful piano ballad, its blues inflected with Eastern modes, while ‘Blue Nile’ is a blissed-out spiritual jazz gem, with Coltrane on harp and the saxophonists doubling up on flutes.

 
The highest song of bliss: Journey In Satchidananda (1971)


Coltrane met her guru Swami Satchidananda in 1970, travelling to India with him, and taking on the name Turiyasangitananda. Sangit means music in Sanskrit, and Coltrane translated her adopted name as ‘the transcendental lord’s highest song of bliss’. Hinduism, she felt, could best accommodate the Universalist vision she and John had explored together, and that syncretic approach is reflected in the world music fusion of Journey In Satchidananda. The title track is Coltrane’s best known tune, and deservedly so, with harp and tamboura wrapping themselves around Cecil McBee’s mantra-like bassline. ‘Isis And Osiris’ reflects Coltrane’s interest in Egyptian cosmology, with Vishnu Wood’s oud cutting through the mystical drift. This is the album which begins Coltrane’s voyage beyond jazz, and it’s as innovative as it is accessible. 


Infinite music: Universal Consciousness (1971), World Galaxy (1972), Lord Of Lords (1972).


Coltrane’s final three albums for Impulse are her most radical, weaving together European modernism, Indian classical, psychedelic rock, gospel and modal jazz to create a truly cosmic music. These albums largely eschew horns for strings and Wurlitzer organ, reflecting her fondness for flowing sounds. As she said in 1971, ‘the instruments which require breathing are more in line with what’s happening on an earthly level, but the instruments that can produce a sound that’s continuous, to me, express the eternal, the infinite.’ 

Universal Consciousness is arguably her masterpiece, an utterly mind-blowing album that is still hard to fathom 46 years on. The astounding title track hits with the force of a meteor, as slashing atonal strings – co-arranged with Ornette Coleman – lay waster to your speaker cones over Jack De Johnette and Rashied Ali’s twin drum barrage. The organ-led ‘Battle At Armageddon’ is one of the heaviest pieces Coltrane recorded, as she teams up with Kali, El Daoud and Jesus Christ to vanquish demonic forces. Her Wurlitzer playing is wild, as she uses the tone wheel to emulate the swoops and bends of her husband’s soprano saxophone, and embarks on freewheeling modal runs that touch on Indian classical music, gospel, and Terry Riley’s wilder flights. The breadth of her spiritual interests is reflected in titles like ‘Oh Allah’ and ‘Hare Krishna’ and ‘The Ankh Of Amen-Ra’. Truly visionary music.

Coltrane handles all the string arrangements on World Galaxy laying dense, billowing clouds of strings over stormy bass and percussion while she lets rip on organ, piano and harp. Her take on ‘My Favourite Things’ is nuts, with the strings modulating from breezy major to dramatic minor, while Coltrane opens vast black holes of organ. The fulcrum of the album is the ‘Galaxy…’ trilogy, where Coltrane elevates her music to the astral plane. ‘Galaxy Around Olodumare’ is free jazz via Stravinsky and Stockhausen, with Frank Lowe’s raw saxophone burning a hole through gaseous string abstractions, before some sudden tape edits turn the universe inside out. ‘Galaxy In Turiya’ is more consonant, with Coltrane’s harp drifting over luscious strings, while the symphonic re-imagining of ‘Galaxy In Satchidananda’ sounds like the birth of a new planet.

Lord Of Lords has Coltrane’s trio going head to head with a full orchestra, with some intriguing versions of Stravinsky and Dvorak themes. The albums Coltrane subsequently recorded for Warners, most notably Eternity (1976) and the awesome live set Transfiguration (1978), push her sound in a more accessible, but no less rewarding, direction, with inventive big band arrangements and flourishes of Latin percussion alongside the strings, piano, harp and organ. 


Guest Spots And Collaborations


In addition to her own projects, Coltrane guested on a number of albums by jazz heavyweights, including McCoy Tyner’s splendid Extensions (recorded 1970, released 1974) and Charlie Haden’s very fine 1976 duets album Closeness. She also worked outside of jazz, contributing harp to Laura Nyro’s 1970 album Christmas And The Beads Of Sweat. Check out the incredible ‘Map To The Treasure’, where Coltrane’s harp ripples gorgeously behind Nyro’s vocal and piano.

Her most sustained collaborative projects, however, are the 1974 albums she made with saxophonist Joe Henderson and Carlos Santana, respectively. Henderson’s The Elements is a concept album exploring the classical model of the cosmos. ‘Earth’ is the highlight, with Coltrane laying a tamboura drone over a deliciously slow and deliberate groove, as Henderson plays superbly off Michael White’s hip violin jabs. It’s not unlike a benign cousin to the vicious tabla-funk of Miles Davis’s ‘Black Satin’. A spacey interlude sees the drums drop out, as Kenneth Nash narrates cosmic wisdom over flute, tabla and harp, and then we’re back into the main theme, with White and Henderson raising the pressure over that indelible groove. 

llluminations is less well regarded ("Carlos attempts once again to reproduce his own alpha waves on guitar and Mrs Coltrane contributes background music barely worthy of ‘Kung Fu’", sniffs the self-styled Dean of Rock Critics Robert Christgau) but it’s worth a listen if you can get with the idea of Santana noodling over lush strings. It’s not all chilled-out music to meditate to: ‘Angel Of Sunlight’ burns, as the group attempt a jazz-rock take on John Coltrane’s late music. Much of the track is taken up with Santana shredding over Jack De Johnette’s hard-driving drum barrage, but Alice shows the boys how it’s done with an irradiating Wurlitzer solo.

Devotional music

In 1975 Alice Coltrane Turiyasangitananda became founder and director of the Vedantic Centre. Her final studio albums for Warners, Radha-Krsna Nama Sankirtana and Transcendence (both 1977) reflect this new stage in her life by exploring traditional Hindu songs, while maintaining a connection to jazz through their complex harmonies and extended instrumental breaks. The growth of her spiritual community led to the establishment of the Sai Anantam Ashram in Cornell, California, in 1983, where she quietly began recording devotional music. She shared these with her followers via a series of private press cassettes, which are now collectors’ items. Selections from Turiya Sings (1982), Divine Songs (1987), Infinite Chants (1990), and Glorious Chants (1995) appear on the new compilation World Spiritual Classics Vol. 1: The Ecastatic Music of Alice Coltrane Turiyasangitananda

The music is absolutely stunning, with its heady mix of Hindu devotional music from the Indian and Nepalese traditions, gospel, spiritual jazz and New Age music. Don’t let the New Age tag put you off. There’s nothing hippy dippy about this music: it is heavy. The arrangements are primarily for organ and synthesiser, with Coltrane joined on vocals by her students. The lightness of the melodies, combined with the density of the drone, is totally mind-bending, with organ and synth laying out huge blocks of chordal bass under the heavenly voices. Coltrane rarely solos, but occasionally adds subtle right hand variations and weird modulations. Best of all are the vast, sweeping synth glissandi she uses to ramp up the intensity of the music, an effect that recalls her orchestral arrangements of the 1970s, while elevating the listener to even higher planes of cosmic bliss. I could listen to those whooshing synths sounds on a loop, although I might never come down.

Coltrane’s alto vocals are gorgeous and deeply felt, not least on the impossibly beautiful ‘Er Ra’, where she sings at the top of her range over harp and strings. She’s joined on the joyous call-and-response kirtans by choirs and other soloists, giving these traditional Hindu hymns a gospel fervour that is matched by the grooving organ and handclaps. In addition to the traditional material, there’s a version of ‘Journey In Satchidananda’ that leaves me breathless, as a choir sings the theme over monumental suspended synth chords that seem to be played by Shiva herself. In the second half, male vocalist Sairam Iyer enters with an impassioned raga and I’m completely sent. Luaka Bop and the Coltrane family can’t be praised enough for making this incredible music more widely available.

 
The 21st century Alice Coltrane: Translinear Light (2004)


Alice Coltrane came out of semi-retirement in the early 2000s to work with her son, the saxophonist and producer Ravi Coltrane, on what would be her final album. As Ravi told the journalist Ashley Kahn, the aim was to make a modern day Alice Coltrane album, ‘forward thinking’ with ‘a little bit of historical influence there’. Featuring a sympathetic cast of collaborators including her old friends Haden and De Johnette, as well as Ravi and his brother Oran on reeds, Translinear Light celebrates her musical and spiritual interests: she revisits her classics ‘Blue Nile’ and ‘Sita Ram’, engages in some stunning modal interplay with Ravi on the gorgeous title track, and channels her gospel roots on a shimmering version of the traditional ‘Walk With Me’. That gospel influence is deeply felt on the Hindu devotional song ‘Satya Sai Isha’, where the Sai Anantam Ashram Singers summon the spirit over grooving organ, shakers and hand-claps. Halfway through, Coltrane doubles the tempo, and the whole thing takes off in a soaring expression of joy. She brings her synths down from the Ashram for blissed out ‘Jagadishwar’ and ‘Hymn’, while her Wurlitzer organ the drives the gospel tune ‘This Train’ down the cosmic railway. Her husband’s music is represented by ‘Cresent’, ‘Leo’, and the bonus track ‘Impressions’ (Interstellar Light), a fiery organ wig-out with De Johnette channelling the Rashied Ali of Interstellar Space. A beautiful and generous album.

https://www.nytimes.com/2017/05/02/arts/music/alice-coltrane-ashtram-world-spirituality-classics.html

Music

Alice Coltrane’s Ashram Recordings Finally Have a Wide Release
by MIKE RUBIN
MAY 2, 2017
New York Times

PHOTOS:  ALICE COLTRANE AND HER SON RAVI (center)
The bhajans would begin with a call-and-response chant of the names of Hindu gods, and then singers like Panduranga John Henderson, who toured with Ray Charles, would solo as the songs built in an improvisational way. “You never knew how long the song was going to be,” said Michelle Coltrane, Ms. Coltrane’s daughter. “There was hand percussion, Indian drums, high voices and low voices and children’s voices, and once you got to the right number it all blended in and sounded very beautiful.”

Alice Coltrane’s great-nephew, Steven Ellison, who records as Flying Lotus, also visited Auntie, as he called her, on Sundays at the ashram. “That was my church experience,” he said in a 2010 interview for The New York Times. “She was really inspiring. I’ve never met anyone like her, ever.”
 
As Ms. Coltrane wrote in an insert for “Divine Songs,” a cassette released in 1990, “chanting is a devotional engagement, one that allows the chanter to soar to higher realms of spiritual consciousness.”

Luaka Bop will release “World Spirituality Classics 1: The Ecstatic Music Of Alice Coltrane Turiyasangitananda” this week. Credit: Luaka Bop
Ms. Coltrane had long been an ecumenical spiritual seeker. She began playing the organ in Mount Olive Baptist Church in Detroit at 9, and made her first album appearance in 1963 on “Terry Gibbs Plays Jewish Melodies in Jazztime.” She soon met and began playing with John Coltrane, who died in 1967, leaving her a widow with four young children. In “Monument Eternal,” her 1977 memoir of her spiritual awakening, Ms. Coltrane describes the period after her husband’s death as one of “tapas,” or austerity, “the taking upon one’s self of a voluntary suffering for some spiritual good.” She experienced sleeplessness, extreme weight loss, visions and, she wrote, “meetings and confrontations with both disembodied souls and phantasmagoric entities.”

After two years of tapas, she found peace in the counsel of Swami Satchidananda, the Indian guru who had given the opening remarks at Woodstock. Ms. Coltrane made several pilgrimages to India, where she received a revelation to leave her secular life behind. She founded the Vedantic Center in 1976 in San Francisco, which eventually relocated to the Agoura ashram in 1983. She changed her name to Turiyasangitananda (“the transcendent bliss of God’s highest song”), having her children practice spelling it out with fridge magnets.

Ms. Coltrane released seven albums on the Impulse! label in the late 1960s and early ’70s and five more for Warner Bros., pushing beyond jazz into what might be termed “cosmic music,” the title of the 1968 album credited to her and Coltrane. After 1978, she devoted herself to the study of Vedic scriptures, and to the bhajans on the Luaka Bop collection. “This is music that she was playing every Sunday, so this was her life now,” Michelle Coltrane said. “She wasn’t really going back.” (In 2004, however, Ms. Coltrane was coaxed by her son Ravi to record one final jazz album, “Translinear Light,” and perform a few shows.)
 
As part of the New York edition of the Red Bull Music Academy Festival, Luaka Bop is presenting two concerts on May 21 in Queens that will try to recreate the ashram’s vibe. Mr. Botofasina is the musical director of the first portion of the event, which will take place at sunset and feature a seven-member choir from the ashram, now called Sai Anantam. (Ravi Coltrane, himself an acclaimed saxophonist, will lead a tribute to her jazz achievements.) “This is the first time that we’ll be attempting to stay very consistently with what she recorded,” Mr. Botosafina said, “and pay homage and re-enact that as accurately as possible.”

But just as the music is finally reaching a larger audience, the fate of the ashram, which is down to about a dozen members, is in doubt: The Coltrane estate put the land up for sale in 2015, though there have been no takers at the $5 million asking price.

“The ashram is ending, but the music is now becoming what the spiritual practice is, and I think that’s an amazingly timed thing,” Mr. Evelev said. “This music then also takes on this other life and hopefully gets to tour around the world, and the people who sang it then will continue to sing it.”

Related Coverage:

Alice Coltrane, Jazz Artist and Spiritual Leader, Dies at 69  January 15, 2007 

Music Review | Alice Coltrane Ascension Ceremony Recalling the Music and the Spirit of a 'Mother of Many' 
http://daily.redbullmusicacademy.com/2016/05/universal-consciousness

"Divine music is a curative virtue; it is a gift from God that brings healing and comfort to the soul. This music can uplift one’s spirit up to a higher dimension of being that is filled with peace and joy. Divine music is the sound of true life, wisdom, and bliss. This music transcends geographical boundaries, language barriers, age factors; and whether educated or uneducated, it reaches deep into the heart and soul, sacred and holy, like an Infinite sound of glory entering the Lord's sanctuary." –- Alice Coltrane (1937 – 2007)

Universal Consciousness: The Spiritual Awakening of Alice Coltrane
by Britt Robson 
May 3, 2016
Red Bull Academy 
 
It was inevitable that the legacy of Alice Coltrane would long be obscured in the massive shadow cast by her husband. John Coltrane, after all, was the most venerated and influential tenor saxophonist in the history of jazz music. 

But the closer one examines the genuinely phenomenal life, music and spirit of Alice Coltrane, the more inevitable it seems that she will also someday receive her proper due. The most striking aspect of her biography is that she became a master musician and a spiritual guru in the same way, by carrying forth all her accumulated wisdom in a welcoming synthesis, rather than shedding, judging and discriminating her way to “growth” and “maturity.”
 
Along this path, Coltrane transformed clichés like “generosity of spirit” and “universal consciousness” into practical implements and palpable goals through the evidence of her music and the abiding example of her devotion. And although it became a singular and generally underappreciated journey, there is some wonderful symmetry in her taking what had been a shared vision with John Coltrane further than anybody would have imagined.
Alice McLeod began absorbing a broad and vivid swath of music and religion at an early age. Her parents directed, played and sang in the choirs at Mt. Olive Baptist Church in Detroit at a time when the city was an industrial hub first for the machinery of World War II and later as a car manufacturer during the economic boom of the postwar era. At her request, Alice began receiving private piano lessons from a neighbor when she was seven. Her performances on piano and organ inspired the congregation to sponsor her music education at a community school. 

By her mid-teens she was a prodigy, in demand to perform at other churches, including those that practiced the hand-clapping, foot-stomping call-and-response services more common in the south. According to a story she related to her biographer, Franya J. Berkman, Alice was playing and vocalizing with the Lemon Gospel Singers in a church one day when “The Lord just completely swept through.” She describes worshipers falling out from the visitation, some being attended to by nurses while others were carried downstairs. Alice described this service, and others like it, as “the gospel experience, musically, of my life!” 

It was during these postwar years of her teens and early twenties that Detroit became the “motor city,” an industrial boomtown, ushering in what was referred to as a golden era in both gospel and bebop jazz. Through her older half-brother Ernest Farrow, an in-demand saxophonist and later bassist, Alice learned the rhythm & blues spin Detroit’s musicians put on the modern language of bop. She played percussion in her high school marching band, self-taught the sidemen in her own jazz trio, and, whenever possible, tagged along with Farrow to hang out with national-caliber talents such as pianist Barry Harris, bassist Cecil McBee and saxophonist Joe Henderson.

Alice’s first working band was called The Premiers, who performed a blend of gospel, jazz and rhythm & blues and included trombonist George Bohanon, bassist Anthony Jackson and drummer Oliver Jackson, who would each go on to appear on dozens of records. “She was proud to say she was from Detroit,” says Alice’s eldest child and only daughter, Miki Coltrane. “There’s a picture of my mom in church next to this huge organ when she couldn’t have been more than 10 or 11 years old. She used to earn a few dollars playing it and give it to my grandma, Annie McLeod. At high school there was Marvin Gaye and the Gordy kids — the Gordy family [before Berry Gordy founded Motown Records] had a store like a 7/11 down the block.” 

In 1960 when she was 23, Alice married Kenneth “Pancho” Hagood, a renowned bebop scat singer eleven years her senior, before the couple relocated to Paris. Their time in Europe was brief — less than a year — but consequential. She became pregnant with her first child, Michelle, now known as Miki Coltrane. She divorced Hagood, Miki’s father, who was besieged by a drug habit. And she spent much of her time studying with the seminal bebop pianist Bud Powell, who became a pronounced influence on her phrasing and approach while also emboldening her to take chances in the music. 

This bold confidence impressed Bennie Maupin —a bass clarinetist who was mentored by Alice and later played on Miles Davis’ Bitches Brew album — after she returned to Detroit. “Some people play it safe. They play things pretty much the same way every time,” Maupin told Berkman. “Alice never did…she was always reaching for something, you know?”
Maupin and Alice also shared a love for a then-new release by John Coltrane, Africa/Brass and together saw Coltrane perform for the first time when he played Detroit in January 1962. After Alice was hired to play in a band led by the vibraphonist Terry Gibbs who was impressed with her Powell-like prowess on piano and the fact that she could also join him on vibes, the group opened for the John Coltrane Quartet during an extended engagement at Birdland in New York in the summer of 1963. That is where John and Alice Coltrane met and fell in love. 

There is no question that John Coltrane delved into Eastern spirituality and religion years before he met Alice. “John was very aware of the Vedantic, the Hindi way of reincarnation and other modes of worship and divinity, of the divine being within instead of up on a cloud,” said Ashley Kahn, the author of A Love Supreme, a book about John Coltrane’s classic album. “He had read the Bhagavad Gita and Autobiography of a Yogi, before he met Alice. “But part of their attraction was certainly that she was predisposed to be on the same sort of musical and spiritual quest, and that they could share that path together.” From the moment Alice notified Gibbs that she was quitting his band because John had asked her to go to Sweden with him before they were married, the Coltranes traveled the world, absorbing cultures.

“They both loved Indian instruments, like the tamboura,” Miki Coltrane remembers. “But there were others too; they brought back a koto and some other instruments from Japan. We had bagpipes in our living room.”
They also had children — three sons between 1964 and 1967. At first, motherhood cut into Alice’s musical career. As Kahn puts it, “While John was upstairs [in their house in Fort Dix, New Jersey] meditating and praying five days solid while composing A Love Supreme, she was taking care of the children and supporting him.”

In July of 1967, just four years after he met Alice at Birdland, John Coltrane died of liver cancer. He had been complaining of pain for months, but held off seeing a doctor and they diagnosed it too late.
"They brought back a koto and some other instruments from Japan. We had bagpipes in our living room."
---Miki Coltrane
Six weeks before her 30th birthday, Alice was a widower with four children, bereft of her soulmate, family breadwinner and chief outlet for her own musical career. Meanwhile, the counterculture was seizing the popular imagination on a number of fronts, be it the Summer of Love, the heyday of the Black Power Movement, or the vogue of alternative religions and forms of consciousness. The assassinations of Martin Luther King and Bobby Kennedy were just over the horizon. Alice Coltrane was breaking down. 

In her spiritual memoir from 1977, also titled Monument Eternal, she describes what seems like a hellish existence from roughly 1968 to 1970. Unable to sleep or eat properly, her weight fell from 118 to 95 pounds. She had hallucinations in which trees spoke, various beings existed on astral planes, and the sounds of “a planetary ether” could spin through her brain and knock her unconscious. Her family was concerned for her health, and more than once she was sent to the hospital due to self-inflicted wounds, including a third-degree burn so awful that her blackened flesh fell off her hand. 

The overarching theme of this riveting, frequently gruesome account is not that Alice fell into the nadir of her existence, but rather that she experienced tapas, a vital period of trial, tribulation and transition. She explains tapas as a time of unremitting austerity, designed to cleanse and enhance her spirit. The relentless and yet serene path she followed in the many decades after her prolonged ordeal validates this outlandish interpretation of events. 

The music under her own name from this period seems intended to further the musical and spiritual direction of her late husband. The first song on the first record is an elegy entitled, “Ohnedaruth,” the name she gave his spirit, which is the Sanskrit word for “compassion.” The sidemen on the three records from 1968-70, A Monastic Trio, Huntington Ashram Monastery and Ptah the El Daoud, are primarily her late husband’s cohorts.

And yet, even with many stylistic similarities, we can hear Alice beginning to figure out how to fill the enormous void under daunting circumstances. The songs are mostly hers, modal tunes with somber moods. But there is strength and sustenance too. Her playing is more prominent, and often she is performing on the harp John bought her shortly before he died. As with the piano, she is playing the entire instrument, set free on glissando arpeggios that Kahn describes as “very loose, almost like water flowing back and forth, very spiritual and meditative.”

But there is also the soulful, swinging bottom that is the rhythm of the Christian church —one song on The Monastic Trio is explicitly entitled “Gospel Trane.” There is also more overt blues and rhythm & blues than late-period John Coltrane was invoking, luminous piano-blues like the song “Turiya and Ramakrishna” on Ptah the El Daoud. There are the introductory bass ostinatos and squawking jazz horns common to John Coltrane, set off by sparkling harp and mournful piano from Alice, who wrote sophisticated jazz arrangements and improvisations spangled with a dab of funk. Her first three releases are appropriately the music of someone who is not John Coltrane but who loves him and cherishes his art. At the time, many critics heard the root influence but were not ready to relate to or reward Alice’s distinctive embellishments and so dismissed the records as pale imitations.
The tapas of austerity helped prepare Alice for a spiritual ally, Swami Satchidanada, an Indian guru introduced to her by another transplanted New York musician from Detroit, Vishnu Wood. Although he was somewhat of a celebrity guru — he came to the United States as a guest of the visual artist Peter Max, and even opened the Woodstock Festival — Satchidanada taught the Hindu philosophy of Advaita Vedanta, which promoted the concept of self-realization, the notion that their soul is not different than god.

Describing this self-realization in a 1988 radio interview, Alice explained, “It just means you go to your fullest and highest potential and not be limited by some tenets of some doctrine that says we come here, here’s the minister, and we pay our tithes and go back to our home or our job or business or whatever and do everything you want.” Advaita Vedanta did not preclude the admission of other faiths — on the contrary it sought to promote global understanding among all religions for people to better serve and love each other, which is the path to their “fullest and highest potential.” 

In her Alice Coltrane biography, Franya Berkman makes two incisive observations about Alice’s embrace of Advaita Vedanta. “[A]s an extraordinarily self-disciplined, independent, and inner-directed artist with a strong predilection for religious expression, Alice was uniquely suited to pursue the yogic and devotional lifestyle that the swami advocated,” she wrote. Also: “In its inclusiveness and emphasis on personal potential, Vedanta is similar to the spiritual and creative philosophy that John Coltrane developed.” 

The first musical manifestation of this commitment was Journey in Satchidananda, recorded in November, 1970, a month before Alice took her first trip to the holy sites of India with the Swami. From the opening title cut, the arching drone of the tamboura, an Indian stringed instrument played by Tulsi, is pervasive, announcing a new Eastern influence that is further enriched by the oud of Vishnu Wood. Many of the John Coltrane touchstones remain, especially the bass ostinatos from Cecil McBee and Charlie Haden. But even the D-minor blues, “Something About John Coltrane,” feels tinged with Eastern spirituality, as Alice’s soulful piano and the beseeching soprano of Pharoah Sanders falls under the tamboura’s sway.

After she returned home from India, Alice unfurled what is arguably the masterpiece of her commercial recording career with Universal Consciousness, recorded less than six months after Journey in Satchidananda. Voracious in her desire to communicate and receive love and wisdom — and unearth it within herself — Alice added Turiya to her name, the Sanskrit word for “pure consciousness.” Following a divine vision, she also plays the Wurlitzer organ for the first time on record, an instrument that would dominate her religious music in the future. Her extensive liner notes conjoin myths and texts from various religions and read like a gothic melodrama. She composed string arrangements for four violinists and got the great avant garde jazz iconoclast Ornette Coleman to transcribe them. At least two of her original compositions, “Hare Krishna” and “Sita Rama,” are based on traditional chants, another component of her later, privately released work. 

Universal Consciousness anticipates the “world music” movement by more than a decade. It is a bountiful blend of a symbolically omnificent organ that absorbs the traditions of the Black church and Indian chanting rituals. Euro-classical strings are embellished and taken further Eastward by the flowing harp passages. The droning tamboura hovers over an ace jazz rhythm section of bassist Jimmy Garrison and drummer Jack DeJohnette, who suggest rhythmic frames and sturdy timbres for the varied meters and chromatic harmonies mushrooming out of the lush mix.

Universal Consciousness became the first album of a trilogy that ended Alice’s relationship with Impulse, the label that contained her husband’s most adventurous recordings and all her own up to this point. Both World Galaxy (recorded in November 1971) and Lord of Lords (the summer of 1972) feature a 16-piece string orchestra, which is used to interpret A Love Supreme, and another John Coltrane-associated work, “My Favorite Things,” on the former record and pieces by Euro-classical composers Stravinsky and Dvorak on the latter album.

The strings are less effective — especially on the John Coltrane pieces — on World Galaxy, which derives its strength from Alice’s protean, ever-shifting instrumentation on organ, piano and harp, and from the saxophone blasts of jazz tenor Frank Lowe. Lord of Lords centers much of its musical energy around the organ (again anticipating Alice’s more overtly spiritual work), especially on her intrepid, jazz-oriented version of Stravinsky’s “Firebird Suite.”

But the crowning glory of Lord of Lords is her reclamation of Dvorak’s “Largo,” from the composer’s New World Symphony. That it was taken by the composer from Negro spirituals he or his assistants heard was made plain when one of his former students transformed it back to a spiritual, entitled “Going Home,” that further evolved into a popular hymn and part of the jazz repertoire.

The Los Angeles-based electronic musician Flying Lotus is a grand-nephew of Alice’s, and in The Pitchfork Review recalls “Going Home” being a popular song frequently played at family funerals, including Alice’s own in 2007.
On Lord of Lords, Alice leads off “Going Home” with harp but switches to organ and executes a driving gospel-blues solo on the instrument accompanied by Haden on bass and [drummer] Ben Riley on drums. The bones of Dvorak’s arrangement are there. The depth, tone and tenor of the piece is restored to its original owners. On her benediction with Impulse, Alice Turiya Coltrane once again didn’t leave anything behind.
After she returned home from India, Alice unfurled a masterpiece: Universal Consciousness.
In 1972, the same year in which she recorded Lord of Lords, Alice relocated to the Bay Area of California, where she founded the Vedantic Center in a San Francisco storefront. Miki, the oldest of her four children, was twelve at the time.

“When we were packing up the house, we were worried about missing our friends, but she said that when she was in meditation [it was revealed to her that] we were supposed to move there,” Miki says. Four years later, when Alice had another revelation, instructing her to abandon the secular life and become a spiritual teacher in the Hindu tradition, the children were first informed by a note on the refrigerator, announcing that her name was now Swamini Turiyasangitananda. By then, Alice had already relocated the Vedantic Center to a house next door to the family home in Woodland Hills, California. 

The 1976 revelation instructed her to build an ashram, and in 1983 she opened the Shanti Anantam Ashram on 50 acres in nearby Agoura Hills, California. By their own accounting, Alice’s children were raised well in this intensely spiritual yet occasionally disruptive environment. 

“We were required to go to services until we were 18, and to learn all the songs, of course, but she allowed us to be children, giggling and poking each other,” Miki said. “When the students lived next door to us, there were courses given on Wednesdays and Sundays, but the students would also cook and we had get-togethers in the rec room, with chances to play violin or read poetry. Most of them were religious-based, but there was still a family feeling to it. The services were much more amazing at 30 years old than at 15, when you were hurrying to get into the car to go to the beach. But it bloomed into being a uniquely devotional experience.” 

When Purusha Hickson first heard Universal Consciousness, he set aside the dishes he was bussing and laid down on the floor to fully absorb it while others covered his shift. It was 1974 and Hickson was a 20-year-old kid who had hitchhiked across the country and was volunteering at One Mind Temple, a San Francisco crash pad serving vegetarian meals in the Fillmore.

“When I heard her music, in my heart I could tell she knew something. I had to meet her,” Hickson said. “People who knew her as Mother Turiya called her up and she said to bring me to see her. She was playing at the 60th birthday of Swami Satchidanada and afterward I got an opportunity to meet her. She was so down-to-earth, with no pretensions, but at the same time there was this spark of light about her.”

Hickson was initiated into the Vedantic Center exactly a year after that meeting, ten days after his 21st birthday in December 1975. He went on to live at the center in Woodland Hills, and later at the ashram. Today he holds a position of honor as the keyboardist in Alice’s stead at the Agoura Hills location, now known as Sai Anatam Ashram.
Hickson had a front-row seat for the changes taking place in Alice’s music. In the mid-to-late ’70s, “she was still playing concerts, but with us she emphasized chanting. She talked about growing closer to god through the power of sound, with the recitation of mantras. And when she played it was otherworldly. Her organ was intense stuff that reminded me of John Coltrane’s saxophone.”
Alice’s move to the West Coast and immersion in religion drew her focus away from commercial recordings. There were collaborations with artists such as Carlos Santana and Joe Henderson, but the first album after Lord of Lords under her own name, Eternity, is a pastiche. Recorded for her new label, Warner Brothers, in the summer of 1975, there are songs overtly connected to rhythm & blues (with her old Premiers bandmate George Bohanon), Afro-Cuban percussion, another bout of strings with Stravinsky, and a series of spiritual tracks albeit with a choir accustomed to Euro-classical singing. 

The next two records nestle into devotion to family and self-realization, and are clearly influenced by the revelation that drew Swamini Turiyasangitananda out of Alice Coltrane. Radha-Krsna Nama Sankirtana, from the late summer of 1976, features her leading her students on five traditional Hindu chant-songs, instrumentally accompanied only by her daughter Miki (identified as Michaelle Sita Coltrane) on tamboura for a short track, and her son, Arjuna John Coltrane Jr., on drums during a glorious 19-minute duet on the closer. 

Transcendence, from the spring of 1977, features a mesmerizing solo track — “Vrindavana Sanchara” — framed by two other spiritually-infused compositions with a string quartet. But the song-chants with her students on the back end of the album are the real reward, for they crystallize the devotional passions of gospel testimony and Hindu bliss in a riveting synergy.

“She used to tell us to chant from the heart and not worry about mispronouncing names; that if you are calling to god, god will know who you are calling to,” Hickson says. “Even when we were chanting in Hindu, she said you don’t have to sound Indian; just give it that universal feeling.”
She used to tell us to chant from the heart and not worry about mispronouncing names; that if you are calling to god, god will know who you are calling to.


Purusha Hickson
“My mother had a totally different emphasis of attack on the devotional songs,” said Miki Coltrane, singing a chant with the gospel tinge of blues and funk. “Then I went to India and heard all these people chanting and they locked it in in a different place,” she continued, providing the familiar singsong rhythm of traditional Hindu chanting. “It was only then that I realized what she had done — I hadn’t noticed. It was done with respect, but [her chants] had a groove.” 

The final commercial recording delivered by Alice in the 20th Century, a live double-album entitled Transfiguration, was at once a throwback to her jazz and classical roots and a forward immersion in spiritual rapture encased in the lineage of her late husband. There is a moving solo piano piece for John Coltrane, entitled, “One For The Father.” “Prema” likewise finds her on piano paired with strings. 

The rest of the music is delivered on organ, accompanied by the ace jazz rhythm section of drummer Roy Haynes and bassist Reggie Workman. It culminates in a blistering 37-minute workout of John Coltrane’s “Leo,” utilizing his 12-tone system that he based on the 12 signs of the zodiac. In her Alice Coltrane bio, Berkman claims “her up tempo keyboard work is the most exciting of her commercial career….she takes leave of the jazz business with a truly breathtaking swan song.” The review at Allmusic.com simply says, “If you can own only one Alice Coltrane record, this should be it.”
Another resplendent outlier in Alice’s musical output is Turiya Sings, arguably her most peaceful and soothing album. Originally released only through the Avatar Book Institute four years after Transfiguration in 1982, it is Alice sing-chanting Hindu mantras over organ, strings and synthesizer, the hauntingly beautiful vocals distilled down from a 15-hour recording session. 

“When Swamini first started teaching, she never sang. But when we moved to Woodland Hills, there were not as many people around, and she wanted to help us until we gathered more voices,” Hickson related. “But when she came out with Turiya Sings, it was kind of amazing.” 

Once the ashram was established in 1983, the music Alice made reflected what was played at services there. Following the South Asian tradition of singing “bhajans”—Hindu texts and chants adapted to music—she went deeper into the form first explored on the spiritual material of her late ’70s albums for Warner Brothers. As with Turiya Sings, for many years, the only way to get Divine Songs (1987), Infinite Chants (1991) and Glorious Chants (1995) was through the Avatar Book Institute or directly at the Sai Anantam Ashram itself. 

Each of the records is a little different. Divine Songs has more of Alice’s individual song-chanting, whereas the Infinite Chants is geared toward the choir at the ashram and the driving sway and hand-clapping of the worshipers. Glorious Chants was recorded in the mandir — or spacious temple — on the grounds of the ashram and is probably the most full-throated choir recording. 

“Sometimes she obviously had an arrangement she worked on privately, and she would teach us the voicings she wanted to hear from that,” said Shankari Adams, another longtime student and the author of the forthcoming biography, Portrait of Devotion: The Spiritual Life of Alice Coltrane, Swamini Turiyasangitananda. “But the most common process I witnessed was her taking the chanting we did during weekly worship service. That would be the bassline and then she would go into the studio and add layers or tracks to that base line for the devotional music. Sometimes it would be tamboura, or strings, or percussion.” The organ was already there. 

“I am a non-musician but she just let us sing from our heart, because what she wanted from the music was the way we were speaking to god, or about god, and the way it touched you,” said another student, Jayalakshmi Moss. “Because of her profound ear, she knew where to place you so were with people who knew music and would be there in front of your face to help you.”

One of the more remarkable things about the Alice Coltrane legacy is how this intensely spiritual music has become something of an underground phenomena. Some of the buzz has been spurred by Flying Lotus, who attended services at the ashram and waxes eloquent about the beauty and power of what Alice was laying down. The availability of this music on Youtube and other sites also exposes more listeners to these unique bhajans. And the record Alice made at the urging of her son Ravi Coltrane — Translinear Light, in 2003 —was another catalyst.
When people talk about reinventing standards, they may go back to the 1920s. Alice was reinterpreting ancient Vedic texts.

Mark “Frosty” McNeill
Among the influential champions of Alice’s devotional music is Mark “Frosty” McNeill, co-founder of internet radio station Dublab out of Los Angeles. “There is this really unique blend of someone fully devoted but also extremely talented, making records on her own schedule and her own terms,” said McNeill, who is in the process of turning his Alice Coltrane fixation into an audio-literary Masters thesis at USC. 

“The actual musical blend continues this idea of universality that both her and John Coltrane had. That means there are not as many boundaries when it comes to the spiritual and the musical,” McNeill says. “The harp is not a common instrument in jazz. The unique string arrangements with the Eastern tonalities and the electric instrumentation are not typically fused — it is unlike anything I have ever heard before. Yeah it sounds like gospel, but then she is singing a Sanskrit chant on top of a soulful Wurlitzer, with synthesizer swells and cosmic sweeps that evoke a big bang creation of the universe.

“I mean, when people talk about reinventing standards for jazz, they may go back to the 1920s. But Alice is reinterpreting ancient Vedic texts that are thousands of years old with her own unique arrangements.” 

“I was born an African American Christian,” said Jayalakshmi Moss, “and I can absolutely hear the church in her music. But it is also absolutely unlike anything I have ever heard. Many of us are well-traveled and we have chanted with many fine masters of spirituality. But we all know that her blend is absolutely unique.”

Moss added that there is “lots and lots of music that Alice recorded in our mandir that has not been released, that is uncut. It is sacred and timeless.” 

Also unreleased is a huge, ambitious project, involving a year of rehearsals at the ashram because the chanting is done in multiple languages, including Sanskrit, Hebrew and English. It includes extensive arrangements for orchestra and was planned in conjunction with her son Ravi and performed in New Jersey in 2006. The title is The Sacred Language of Ascension, deliberately meant to harken to John Coltrane’s Ascension, perhaps his pinnacle of impassioned sheets of sound. And as recently as this past February 27, there was a sold-out performance of Universal Consciousness at the Portland Jazz Festival, led by Ravi Coltrane and Pharoah Sanders. Nearly a decade after her death, Alice Coltrane is finally in vogue, her once checkered reputation as a jazz artist and musical visionary buttressed for the ages. But then, she always had bigger concerns than what people thought of her. 

“People used to ask her all the time, ‘Should I call you Alice or Swamini?’ And she would always say, ‘You can call me either one, whatever you like,’” said Hickson. “She taught us that people start out with an external person, a guru or shaman, but that person will only take you so far,” said Adams. “In the end, people have to make the journey inward, ourselves. Our only real guru is our divine inner spirit.” 

Or, as Miki Coltrane puts it, “Most people don’t have the kind of patience, or the kind of belief, that my mother had. She didn’t toot her own horn. She let the universe handle it.”

Illustrations by Robert Beatty


http://www.nytimes.com/2007/01/15/arts/music/15colt.html

Music

Alice Coltrane, Jazz Artist and Spiritual Leader, Dies at 69
by BEN RATLIFF
January 15, 2007
New York Times

 
Alice Coltrane, widow of the jazz saxophonist John Coltrane and the pianist in his later bands, who extended her musical searches into a vocation as a spiritual leader, died on Friday in Los Angeles. She was 69.

The cause was respiratory failure, said Marilyn McLeod, her sister and assistant.

Ms. Coltrane lived in the Woodland Hills section of Los Angeles near the Sai Anantam ashram in Agoura Hills, which she had founded in 1983. Known as Swami Turiyasangitananda, Sanskrit for “the highest song of God,” she was the guiding presence of the 48-acre ashram, set among the Santa Monica mountains, where 25 to 30 full-time residents study the Vedic scriptures of ancient India, as well as Buddhist and Islamic texts.

She was also the manager of Coltrane’s estate, as well as of his music-publishing company, Jowcol Music, and the John Coltrane Foundation, which has given out scholarships to music students since 2001.

As a pianist, her playing was dense with arpeggios that suggested the harp; the instrument had an important place in her life. One of her childhood heroes was the Detroit-based jazz harpist Dorothy Ashby, and she was later motivated to study that instrument by Coltrane, who loved its sound.

Raised in a musical family in Detroit, Ms. Coltrane played piano and organ for church choirs and Sunday school from age 7. As a young musician in Detroit, she was studying classical music and playing piano in jazz clubs, in a group including her half-brother, the bassist Ernie Farrow, and the trombonist George Bohannon.

In her early 20s she lived briefly in Paris, where she studied informally with the pianist Bud Powell, and was briefly married to the singer Kenny (Pancho) Hagood, with whom she had a daughter, Michelle. She returned to Detroit, playing in a band with her brother, and then moved to New York in 1962. A year later she met John Coltrane.

Alice Coltrane
She was playing vibraphone and Powell-inspired bebop piano in a group led by the drummer Terry Gibbs at Birdland, on a double-bill with Coltrane’s quartet. Coltrane was well established by the beginning of the 1960s, though she hadn’t known about him for long before moving to New York; the first time she ever heard him, she said, was on the 1961 album “Africa/Brass.”

They connected instantly; she moved in with him and traveled with the Coltrane band. By the summer of 1964 they had relocated from New York City to a house in Dix Hills, on Long Island. They married in 1965 in Juárez, Mexico, coinciding with Coltrane’s divorce from his first wife, Naima Grubbs. By that time she and Coltrane had already had two of their three children together — John Jr., who died in 1982, and Ravi, who by his 30s had become an acclaimed jazz saxophonist.

Ms. Coltrane is survived by her sisters, Marilyn McLeod of Winnetka, Calif., and Margaret Roberts of Detroit; her daughter, Michelle Carbonell-Coltrane of Los Angeles; her sons Oran Coltrane of Los Angeles and Ravi, of Brooklyn; and five grandchildren.

In 1966, as the Coltrane band’s music became wilder and more prolix, she became its pianist. She replaced McCoy Tyner, who quit without rancor, largely because he could no longer hear himself on the bandstand. Though she wasn’t Mr. Tyner’s technical equal and lacked his percussive power, she fit with the group’s new purpose; by the time of the recordings that would become the album “Stellar Regions,” in February 1967, she was fluid and energetic within the group’s freer new language.

She told an interviewer that Coltrane helped her to play “thoroughly and completely.” This meant stretching the definitions of rhythm and harmony, but she also meant something broader; Coltrane was talking about “universalizing” his music, creating a nondenominational religious art that took cues from ancient history and foreign scales. He helped her to sign a contract as a solo artist with his label, Impulse. And he introduced her to Eastern philosophy and religion, which became the main focus of her life.

After Coltrane’s death from liver cancer in 1967, Ms. Coltrane took a vow of celibacy. And at first she made music closely related to his, often reflective, minor and modal; on piano or harp she played flowing, harplike phrases over a deep midtempo swing, and she worked with the bassist Jimmy Garrison and the drummer Rashied Ali from John Coltrane’s band. On records like “A Monastic Trio,” “Ptah, the El Daoud” and “Journey in Satchidananda,” she was able to reconcile blues phrases and jazz rhythm with a kind of ancient, flowing sound.

Ms. Coltrane met her guru, Swami Satchidananda, in 1970, and in more recent years became a devotee of Sathya Sai Baba. By the early 1970s she developed a renewed interest in the organ, because it produced a continuous sound; she wanted to make a meditative music that wouldn’t be interrupted by pauses for breath. Her 1972 record, “Universal Consciousness,” with Ms. Coltrane on Wurlitzer organ and string arrangements by Ornette Coleman, became a far-out classic. In the mid-70s she switched to the Warner Brothers label and made four more records, including orchestras and Hindu chants. Thereafter, until 2004, she made records purely for religious purposes, distributing them privately.

After first establishing the Vedanta Center in San Francisco, she moved her ashram to Agoura Hills, just northwest of Los Angeles, and expanded it. In the past 10 years, she performed the occasional concert with Ravi, and in 2004 she finally returned to recording jazz, making “Translinear Light,” produced by Ravi, who reunited her with some old colleagues like Charlie Haden and Jack DeJohnette, as well as a chorus of singers from her ashram.

Correction Appended

Correction: January 30, 2007 
 
An obituary on Jan. 15 about Alice Coltrane, the widow and piano accompanist of the jazz saxophonist John Coltrane, referred incompletely to the musician Terry Gibbs, with whom she played early in her career. Although he plays the drums, he is best known as a vibraphonist. 

Alice Coltrane and her son Ravi Coltrane being interviewed at international jazz music festival Jazz Jamboree in Warsaw, Poland in 1987. 
 
(c) TVP - Telewizja Polska S.A. #AliceColtrane #Interview #RaviColtrane #JohnColtrane
 

Alice Coltrane - "Song Of The Underground Railroad" (Jazz Jamboree, 1987)

 
Alice Coltrane performing 'Song Of The Underground Railroad' at international jazz music festival Jazz Jamboree in Warsaw, Poland in 1987. 
 
 
Piano, Harp – Alice Coltrane 
Saxophone – Ravi Coltrane 
Drums – Roy Haynes 
Contrabass – Reggie Workman 
 
 (c) TVP - Telewizja Polska S.A.
 

Alice Coltrane - Harp Solo (Jazz Jamboree, 1987):

Alice Coltrane performing a harp solo at international jazz music festival Jazz Jamboree in Warsaw, Poland in 1987. 
 
Piano, Harp – Alice Coltrane 
Saxophone – Ravi Coltrane
Drums – Roy Haynes 
Contrabass – Reggie Workman 
 
(c) TVP - Telewizja Polska S.A.  

Alice Coltrane - 'A Love Supreme' (Jazz Jamboree, 1987)

Alice Coltrane performing 'A Love Supreme' at international jazz music festival Jazz Jamboree in Warsaw, Poland in 1987:
 

Piano, Harp – Alice Coltrane 
Saxophone – Ravi Coltrane 
Drums – Roy Haynes 
Contrabass – Reggie Workman 
 
(c) TVP - Telewizja Polska S.A. 

Alice Coltrane - Lonnie's Lament (Jazz Jamboree, 1987)

 
Alice Coltrane performing 'Lonnie's Lament' at international jazz music festival Jazz Jamboree in Warsaw, Poland in 1987:
 

Piano, Harp – Alice Coltrane 
Saxophone – Ravi Coltrane 
Drums – Roy Haynes 
Contrabass – Reggie Workman 
 
(c) TVP - Telewizja Polska S.A. #AliceColtrane

Alice Coltrane - "Impressions" (Jazz Jamboree, 1987)

 
Alice Coltrane performing 'Impressions' at international jazz music festival Jazz Jamboree in Warsaw, Poland in 1987:
 
 
Piano, Harp – Alice Coltrane 
Saxophone – Ravi Coltrane 
Drums – Roy Haynes 
Contrabass – Reggie Workman 
 
(c) TVP - Telewizja Polska S.A. 
 

Alice Coltrane - Live at the Berkeley Community Theater 1972 (2019) [Full Album]:


BCT Records
 
 
Recorded live at the Berkeley Community Theater, 
July 23, 1972
 
1 Journey in Satchidananda 00:00 
2 A Love Supreme 21:25 
3 My Favorite Things 40:12 
4 Leo 56:08 
 
Bass – Charlie Haden 
Drums – Ben Riley 
Harp, Organ, Piano – Alice Coltrane 
Sarod – Aashish Khan 
Tabla – Pranesh Khan 
Tambora, Percussion – Bobby W.

Alice Coltrane - Reflection on Creation and Space (A Five Year View) LP 1973 [FULL ALBUM]


Alice Coltrane's Reflection on Creation and Space (A Five Year View) 1973 album:
 
 
 
Side A: 
 
Blue Nile ( 0:00
The Sun ( 5:19
Galaxy Around Olodumare ( 8:51
Galaxy In Turiya ( 11:12
 
Side B: 
 
Journey In Satchidananda + Galaxy In Satchidananda (19:59
Battle At Armageddon (26:46
Lovely Sky Boat ( 34:03
 
Side C: 
 
A Love Supreme ( 40:10
Sri Rama Ohnedaruth ( 47:15
Andromeda's Suffering ( 51:52
 
Side D: 
 
I Want To See You ( 59:49
Sita Ram ( 1:06:26
Oh Allah ( 1:09:52
The Firebird ( 1:15:29
 
Musicians: 
 
Arranged By [Orchestra], 
Conductor [Orchestra] – Alice Coltrane 
 
Bass – Ron Carter, Cecil McBee, Charlie Haden, Jimmy Garrison, Reggie Workman 
Bells – Chuck Stewart, Majid Shabazz, Pharoah Sanders, 
Cello – Anne Goodman, Edgar Lustgarden, Jan Kelly, Jerry Kessler, Jesse Ehrlich, Raphael Kramer, Ray Kelley 
 
Concertmaster – David Sackson, Murray Adler 
 
Drums – Ben Riley, Rashied Ali, Clifford Jarvis, Jack DeJohnette 
Flute [Alto] – Joe Henderson, Pharoah Sanders 
Harp – Alice Coltrane 
Organ – Alice Coltrane 
Percussion – Pharoah Sanders 
Piano – Alice Coltrane 
Producer – Alice Coltrane, Bob Thiele, Ed Michel 
 
Strings – Allan Schulman, Arthur Aaron, Avron Coleman, Edward Green, Harry Glickman, Henry Aaron, Irving Spice, Janet Hill, Joan Kalisch, Julien Barber, Leroy Jenkins, Robert Lipscomb, Seymour Miroff, Thomas Nickerson, William Stone 
 
Tambourine – Majid Shabazz 
Tambura [Tamboura] – Alice Coltrane, 
Tulsi Timpani [Tympani] – Elayne Jones 
 
Viola – David Schwartz, Leonard Selic, Marilyn Baker, Myra Kestenbaum, Rollice Dale, Samuel Boghosian 
 
Violin – Gerald Vinci, Gordon Maron, James Getzoff, Janice Gower, Leonard Malarsky, Lou Klass, Nathan Kaproff, Ronald Folsom, Ronald Kundell, Sidney Sharp, William Henderson, John Blair, Julius Brand

Alice Coltrane 16mm doc. 1970 (Black Journal) rare

June 15, 2020
  The segment focuses on the life of Alice Coltrane and her children in the wake of the death of her husband, famed jazz musician John Coltrane. This film was shot sometime during 1970; three years after the death of John Coltrane. The 16mm color film print is a short documentary made for a segment of National Education Television's Black Journal television program. This film opens with a collage of photos of jazz musician John Coltrane with a voice-over of a male narrator communicating the musical genius and personal demeanor of the renowned music artist. The voice-over ends with an open-ended statement on John Coltrane's family; leading into an interview with his wife, Alice Coltrane. Alice Coltrane discusses the influence her late husband has had on her life, both musically and spiritually. She speaks of him being a spiritual person, although not tied to one organized religion, his vegetarian diet, and how he carved time out of his days to meditate. There is footage of their children playing in the yard and walking with their mother. Alice plays the harp and talks about how her music is a manifestation of her spirituality. She discusses her musical career and how she balances that with being a mother and paying tribute to her late husband, but also not wanting to be defined as an extension of John Coltrane's music. Instead, when she finds herself playing some of the music he wrote, she sees herself as sharing in what he produced throughout his career. Footage of her playing the piano at a small jazz concert with a few other musicians plays for two minutes. In the final minutes of the segment, Alice Coltrane explains her relationship with a higher power and the personal enlightenment she has felt and gained through meditation. The film ends with a dolly-out/zoom-out long shot of Alice Coltrane and her children waving from their home. CREDIT: Collection of the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture, Gift of Pearl Bowser

Black Journal: Alice Coltrane
thepostarchive
16mm motion picture film of Alice Coltrane (Black Journal segment):

op: https://nmaahc.si.edu/object/nmaahc_2... Dimensions Duration: 17 Minutes 
 
Caption: This 16mm film is a documentary segment focusing on the life of Alice Coltrane and her children in the wake of the death of her husband, famed jazz magician John Coltrane. Description The 16mm color film print is a short documentary made for a segment of National Education Television's Black Journal television program. The segment focuses on the life of Alice Coltrane and her children in the wake of the death of her husband, famed jazz magician John Coltrane. This film was shot sometime during 1970; three years after the death of John Coltrane. This film opens with a collage of photos of jazz musician John Coltrane with a voice-over of a male narrator communicating the musical genius and personal demeanor of the renowned music artist. The voice-over ends with an open-ended statement on John Coltrane's family; leading into an interview with his wife, Alice Coltrane. Alice Coltrane discusses the influence her late husband has had on her life, both musically and spiritually. She speaks of him being a spiritual person, although not tied to one organized religion, his vegetarian diet, and the how he carved time out of his days to meditate. There is footage of their children playing in the yard and walking with their mother. Alice plays the harp and talks about how her music is a manifestation of her spirituality. She discusses her musical career and how she balances that with being a mother and paying tribute to her late husband, but also not wanting to be defined as an extension of John Coltrane's music. Instead, when she finds herself playing some of the music he wrote, she sees herself as sharing in what he produced throughout his career. Footage of her playing the piano at a small jazz concert with a few other musicians plays for two minutes. In the final minutes of the segment, Alice Coltrane explains her relationship with a higher power and the personal enlightenment she has felt and gained through meditation. The film ends with a dolly-out/zoom-out long shot of Alice Coltrane and her children waving from their home.

Alice Coltrane 16mm documentary 1970 (Black Journal) rare

The segment focuses on the life of Alice Coltrane and her children in the wake of the death of her husband, famed jazz musician John Coltrane. This film was shot sometime during 1970; three years after the death of John Coltrane. 
 
The 16mm color film print is a short documentary made for a segment of National Education Television's Black Journal television program. This film opens with a collage of photos of jazz musician John Coltrane with a voice-over of a male narrator communicating the musical genius and personal demeanor of the renowned music artist. The voice-over ends with an open-ended statement on John Coltrane's family; leading into an interview with his wife, Alice Coltrane. Alice Coltrane discusses the influence her late husband has had on her life, both musically and spiritually. She speaks of him being a spiritual person, although not tied to one organized religion, his vegetarian diet, and how he carved time out of his days to meditate. There is footage of their children playing in the yard and walking with their mother. Alice plays the harp and talks about how her music is a manifestation of her spirituality. She discusses her musical career and how she balances that with being a mother and paying tribute to her late husband, but also not wanting to be defined as an extension of John Coltrane's music. Instead, when she finds herself playing some of the music he wrote, she sees herself as sharing in what he produced throughout his career. Footage of her playing the piano at a small jazz concert with a few other musicians plays for two minutes. In the final minutes of the segment, Alice Coltrane explains her relationship with a higher power and the personal enlightenment she has felt and gained through meditation. The film ends with a dolly-out/zoom-out long shot of Alice Coltrane and her children waving from their home:
 
 
CREDIT: Collection of the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture, Gift of Pearl Bowser
 

Alice Coltrane Interview & Performance w/ Marian McPartland - 1981 | bernie's bootlegs

Carnegie Hall '71 is a live album by Alice Coltrane. It was recorded at Carnegie Hall in New York City on February 21, 1971, and was released in 2018 by the Hi Hat label. On the album, Coltrane appears on piano and harp, and is joined by saxophonists Pharoah Sanders and Archie Shepp, bassists Jimmy Garrison and Cecil McBee, and drummers Ed Blackwell and Clifford Jarvis.[1][2][3]

The album, which consists of a single track documenting a performance of John Coltrane's "Africa", was recorded at a benefit for Swami Satchidanda's Integral Yoga Institute that also featured Laura Nyro and The New Rascals.[4][3] Regarding Coltrane's band, a concert reviewer for Billboard wrote: 

"This was one of the greatest assemblages to appear on the Carnegie Hall stage."[5]

In 2021, the album was reissued by the Alternative Fox label with the title Live at Carnegie Hall, 1971.[6]

A writer for Pan African Music stated that the album "is a splendid and ecstatic memento of spiritual jazz with some of its greatest masters. The splitting horns, wild drums, and clamouring piano are a vivid display of virtuosity in motion.

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