The Evolution Of Alice Coltrane's Ecstatic Music

26 May 2017 | 12:22 pm | Bob Baker Fish

"It's nothing short of the sound of transcendence."

In 1966 Alice Coltrane replaced McCoy Tyner in her husband John's band, appearing on seminal albums like Live At The Village Vanguard Again!.

When he passed she carried the flame as bandleader on incendiary albums with fellow band members such as Pharoah Sanders and Rashied Ali, though during this time she was also clearly suffering from the trauma of losing her husband and the responsibility of raising four children alone.

Introduced to Swami Satchidananda, her healing and spiritual enlightenment began, and her musical style evolved, exploring deeply spiritual music on 1971's extraordinary world music-tinged Journey In Satchidananda.

While her early music as bandleader was about free music, her four albums on Warner Brothers from 1973-78 are a remarkable evolution into a whole new form where free jazz meets devotional music.

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It was her own unique vision and less in the shadow of her late husband. 1975's string and organ workout Eternity in particular is jaw dropping. By 1983 she was a spiritual leader in a Californian Ashram she founded, only performing and distributing cassettes to her followers.

These tapes continued her remarkable development, experimenting with her own vocals (for the first time), synthesisers, harp, a 24-piece vocal choir and eastern percussion.

Seriously, there is nothing else in existence like this music. Luaka Bop have released a compilation of her Ashram tapes, entitled World Spirituality Classics Volume 1: The Ecstatic Music Of Alice Coltrane Turiyasangitananda and it's nothing short of the sound of transcendence.

The Sai Anantam Singers will perform The Ecstatic Music Of Alice Coltrane Turiyasangitananda in Melbourne as part of Supersense this August. Click here for more details.