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alice coltrane
Explore "alice coltrane" with insightful episodes like "Solénoïde - SolénoMix CATHERINE GRAINDORGE - 30.10.2023", "Alice Coltrane's "Journey in Satchidananda"" and "Michelle Coltrane On Alice Coltrane's New Recording Kirtan: Turiya Sings" from podcasts like ""Solénoïde - L'émission des Musiques Imaginogènes sur 30 radios FM-DAB", "Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Albums" and "Profiles With Maggie LePique"" and more!
Episodes (3)
Alice Coltrane's "Journey in Satchidananda"
Alice Coltrane spent the mid-Sixties in personal and musical bliss, starting a family with John Coltrane and touring the world as the pianist in his band. Then John died suddenly of liver cancer in 1967. Newly widowed at the age of 29 with four children to care for, she plunged into a lengthy period of despair. Sensing her pain, an old friend introduced her to his guru, Swami Satchidananda. With a new clarity — and a harp that John had commissioned for her before his death — she entered the basement studio of her Long Island home and recorded Journey in Satchidananda. Our episode retraces the entire arc of this remarkable 1971 record: We step into the basement where the album was recorded; speak to several musicians who played on it as well as Alice's daughter, Michelle; hear from musicians it influenced — including Flying Lotus, the grandson of Alice's sister; and hear archival interviews with Alice herself, delving into the remarkable story of a woman who crafted something beautiful and enduring in the time of her deepest pain.
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Michelle Coltrane On Alice Coltrane's New Recording Kirtan: Turiya Sings
Alice Coltrane’s ashram album Kirtan: Turiya Sings gets first release.
Michelle Coltrane joins Maggie to discuss her Mother's latest release from Impulse! Records Kirtan: Turiya Sings . After releasing the wondrous Transfiguration in 1978, documenting a live concert with drummer Roy Haynes and bassist Reggie Workman, Alice Coltrane retreated from public life to serve as swamini in an ashram she founded in Agoura Hills, California. Though she resurfaced briefly at John Coltrane tribute concerts during the 1990s and released a final album, Translinear Light, in 2004, it was widely thought she had abandoned music for over two decades.
However, during that time, she was playing alone and with others for Sunday "kirtans" (services), and she occasionally recorded devotional chants for her followers. In 2017, Luaka Bop released The Ecstatic Music of Alice Coltrane Turiyasangitananda; its music was compiled from four privately pressed (and professionally recorded) cassettes. The first of these was 1982's Turiya Sings, and marked the first recording of her singing voice, accompanied by organ, strings, synths, and in places, minimal sound effects. Commercially unavailable, it has been streaming on YouTube for years. Kirtan: Turiya Sings, issued by Impulse!, presents that album in a startling new context. This rare mix -- unheard even by Ravi Coltrane until he was producing Translinear Light -- presents Alice's prayerful rendition of nine traditional Hindu chants called "bhajans," offered with only her Wurlitzer organ in support.
Source: https://www.allmusic.com/album/kirtan-turiya-sings-mw0003535709
Source: https://www.alicecoltrane.com
Source: http://www.impulserecords.com/artists
This episode is from an archive from the KPFK program Profiles adapted for podcast.
Host Maggie LePique, a radio veteran since the 1980's at NPR in Kansas City Mo. She began her radio career in Los Angeles in the early 1990's and has worked for Pacifica station KPFK Radio in Los Angeles since 1994.