Review: Recorded live at UCLA in April 1978, Alice Coltrane performs on piano and organ alongside Roy Haynes on drums and Reggie Workman on bass. The trio creates a transcendent experience, inviting listeners to journey into the depths of sound and self. Coltrane's performance blends intensity with serenity, drawing you closer to the music and your inner being. This concert, much like John Coltrane's A Love Supreme, seeks transformation. Transfiguration captures a rare moment of musical and spiritual connection, where music becomes a vehicle for liberation and transcendence.
Review: Alice Coltrane's Eternity marks a unique period where her music transcended traditional jazz boundaries. Created just after she established her Vedantic Center, this album explores both secular and spiritual worlds through richly layered compositions. Moving between Vedic chants, lush orchestration and cosmic jazz, Eternity reveals Coltrane's expanding vision and personal growth. No longer solely defined by her husband's legacy, she crafts a distinct sound that balances earthly experiences with a profound spiritual journey thus making this album a transformative listen in her storied career.
Review: n 1968, Alice Coltrane embarked on her first solo endeavor with this album which served as a tribute to her late husband, John Coltrane, and features Pharoah Sanders, Jimmy Garrison, and Rashied Ali - members of Coltrane's final quintet. Initially met with lukewarm reviews, this album gains significance when viewed within Coltrane's broader oeuvre. A Monastic Trio offers a glimpse into her evolving style, foreshadowing her subsequent creative trajectory and this Verve By Request reissue is pressed on 180-gram vinyl at Third Man in Detroit, so captures the essence of Coltrane's pioneering spirit and lays the foundation for her enduring musical legacy.
Review: In 1971, the harpist, pianist and ultimately multi-instrumentalist jazz musician Alice Coltrane performed at the Carnegie Hall for a special gala benefiting the Integral Yoga Institute. Backed by an all-star group of musicians, Coltrane delivered a captivating set which will now be available in its entirety on vinyl for the first time. The Carnegie Hall Concert, now out on Verve, documents one of the defining moments of Coltrane's career, taking place not long after the immediate positive reception to the release of her spotlit Journey In Satchidananda LP. The concert, which spans both recognisable and unique compositions by Coltrane, ultimately conveyed a uniquely Eastern edge lent to Western spiritual jazz, and came as the first dedicated concert to be themed after the lessons gleaned from recognition of the Hindu god and enlightened state, Satchidananda; it enlisted the aid of two of her closest friends in the circle she'd joined during a formative trip to India that year, Kumar Kramer and Tulsi Reynolds.
Review: Journey in Satchidananda was the fourth solo album by Alice Coltrane and it might be her best-known work. Some of the tunes here were recorded live at the Village Gate while the rest were recorded at her home studio in Dix Hills in New York, and all of them were released in 1971. The album has grown ever more mythical in status and store since then with its transcendental spiritual jazz sounds with layered-up bells, tambourine, tanpura and more into a sound that leans heavily on Coltrane's love of Middle Eastern and North African music and culture. Earthy, bluesy, steeped in musical mantra and utterly absorbing, it's one of the most enthralling records of the era.
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