Alice Coltrane - S/D

Message Bookmarked
Bookmark Removed
Not all messages are displayed: show all messages (688 of them)

the way things have been going, i wouldn't be surprised if they were like, "We've finally restored this concert to its original version, where a technical error muted Pharoah Sanders's microphone, rendering him inaudible for the entire concert!"

― budo jeru, Wednesday, February 7, 2024 6:58 PM (yesterday) bookmarkflaglink

say more about this, is there a collective will to sand the skronkier edges off alice?

plax (ico), Thursday, 8 February 2024 14:37 (two months ago) link

I think he's referring to the altered release of Turiya Sings?

Surfin' burbbhrbhbbhbburbbb (sleeve), Thursday, 8 February 2024 15:23 (two months ago) link

Pre-orders are up; black vinyl, orange vinyl and a 2CD set. I got the press download last night; it sounds amazing so far. Bought the 2CD set.

Tahuti Watches L&O:SVU Reruns Without His Ape (unperson), Thursday, 8 February 2024 15:34 (two months ago) link

xp yup

budo jeru, Thursday, 8 February 2024 21:36 (two months ago) link

one month passes...

I figured this was going to be good but it is good

chr1sb3singer, Friday, 22 March 2024 14:49 (one month ago) link

Very excited to get my copy, glad to upgrade that grey market bootleg with only a part of the set. So the Aquarium Drunkard review isn't just hyperbole?

Had The Carnegie Hall Concert been released in 1971 when it was originally commissioned and recorded by Impulse as a double live LP, it would undoubtedly rank among the all-time holy grails of live jazz, no, live music, period.

Maxmillion D. Boosted (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Friday, 22 March 2024 14:50 (one month ago) link

I mean this all-time holy grails of live jazz, no, live music, period is a bit of a high bar but a few moments on here on genuinely stunning

chr1sb3singer, Friday, 22 March 2024 14:55 (one month ago) link

Haha, I figured that might be a stretch, but I am just thrilled this exists now.

Maxmillion D. Boosted (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Friday, 22 March 2024 14:55 (one month ago) link

it's blowing my mind imagining how mind blowing it must have been being in the audience for this. the sound quality of the recording is way better than the clips i had heard alluded to. really stunning!

stirmonster, Friday, 22 March 2024 15:57 (one month ago) link

It's really, really good. Waiting for my CD copy to arrive.

I wonder if it was sourced from a reference master or something because there are some moments of crunchy static and some weirdness where the applause between certain songs seems looped? Maybe the promotional WAV files I was sent were wonky, I don't know. But on a purely musical level, yeah, it's top-tier Alice.

Tahuti Watches L&O:SVU Reruns Without His Ape (unperson), Friday, 22 March 2024 16:07 (one month ago) link

Yeah, I read in one of the reviews that there was weird looping in the crowd sounds between songs, like they were trying to cover for some other audio glitch or something. But, whatever, if weird applause between songs is the worst things about this release, we are truly blessed.

Maxmillion D. Boosted (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Friday, 22 March 2024 16:35 (one month ago) link

I haven't done a really close listen yet but as far as I could tell there were only the weird, static-y audio issues during the interstitial crowd noise

chr1sb3singer, Friday, 22 March 2024 17:17 (one month ago) link

Listening now, and wow.

Marten Broadcloak, mild-mannered GOP congressman (Raymond Cummings), Friday, 22 March 2024 23:50 (one month ago) link

… and yeah, the applause sounds - weird.

Marten Broadcloak, mild-mannered GOP congressman (Raymond Cummings), Saturday, 23 March 2024 00:01 (one month ago) link

The applause sounds very far away but that adds something to the atmosphere

plax (ico), Saturday, 23 March 2024 06:31 (one month ago) link

the applause is being picked up by the on stage mics rather than there being a mic recording the audience sound too.

stirmonster, Saturday, 23 March 2024 11:28 (one month ago) link

what a great recording

re:

Had The Carnegie Hall Concert been released in 1971 when it was originally commissioned and recorded by Impulse as a double live LP, it would undoubtedly rank among the all-time holy grails of live jazz, no, live music, period.

what was the initial reception of Journey in Satchidananda like? I've a feeling it wasn't an instant classic, or maybe just that "spiritual jazz" wasn't as popular then (when fusion must've been all the rage) as it is now

corrs unplugged, Tuesday, 26 March 2024 08:00 (one month ago) link

I love the very no nonsense liners by Ed Michel, he's very frank that the label heads didn't think much of AC's music, were only interested in her in so far as she controlled the on the label the John Coltrane estate and that even though the recording was inexpensive to do and the quality was good and AC, Sanders, and Shepp were all on the label they weren't interested in doing a live record (though sounds like they were briefly interested when she signed with Warners 'natch)

I can't speak to what the reaction was at the time and I am sure it has been mentioned upthread but the AC re-evaluation is pretty recent, even in the early 90s when I was getting into jazz she was considered a joke, lots of Yoko Ono jokes, that sort of thing

chr1sb3singer, Tuesday, 26 March 2024 13:48 (one month ago) link

Yeah, the dude gatekeeper aficionadoes of so many scenes are colossal assholes by nature.

misogyny is a powerful drug!
the scorn heaped on women musicians really piled up in the cursed early 90s
imo/ime

Piggy Lepton (La Lechera), Tuesday, 26 March 2024 13:53 (one month ago) link

Also Michel's story about his run-in with a union stagehand is straight out of Zappa's "Rudy Wants to Buy Yez a Drink"

chr1sb3singer, Tuesday, 26 March 2024 13:58 (one month ago) link

i didn't realize he was still alive

budo jeru, Tuesday, 26 March 2024 14:05 (one month ago) link

A former acquaintance of mine was a big John Coltrane fan, and felt that Alice had 'weakened' him in some way as he wasn't splurging out endless solos on his later records but approaching the music more texturally. He had nothing but contempt for her, musically and personally. Yes this was in the early 90s of course, don't know what he thinks about her nowadays and don't care.

two-one-one-two (Matt #2), Tuesday, 26 March 2024 14:21 (one month ago) link

There's a terrible line in Richard Cook's Jazz Encycopledia from 2005: "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 McCleod."

As anyone who's read one of the Penguin Guides will know, Cook has some spicy takes, but this is incredibly wrongheaded and misogynistic. Hugely disappointing.

Composition 40b (Stew), Tuesday, 26 March 2024 14:27 (one month ago) link

that sucks. but more jazz critics are clueless losers than not, so not necessarily a surprise either, sadly

budo jeru, Tuesday, 26 March 2024 14:46 (one month ago) link

Sad but not surprising

Marten Broadcloak, mild-mannered GOP congressman (Raymond Cummings), Tuesday, 26 March 2024 14:54 (one month ago) link

Who cares if it’s surprising? The mundane nature of these criticisms are what characterize them for me. It’s as if everyone already believes that AC is untalented and this person is just saying it out loud.

Piggy Lepton (La Lechera), Tuesday, 26 March 2024 14:56 (one month ago) link

I can't speak to what the reaction was at the time and I am sure it has been mentioned upthread but the AC re-evaluation is pretty recent, even in the early 90s when I was getting into jazz she was considered a joke, lots of Yoko Ono jokes, that sort of thing

This is really interesting to read and I'm not contradicting it at all. I do remember for me just getting into jazz as a teen in the late '90s, I was drawn to the look of all those Impulse digipak reissues and I was seeing those three AC reissues (Journey.., Ptah.., A Monastic Trio) on essentially equal footing as not just the Sanders albums but also, like...the Count Basie and Coleman Hawkins albums reissued at the same time. Obviously an ahistorical experience for me as a new listener, but it made me think her music was quality work and clearly someone at the label thought there was enough interest in her solo stuff to get those albums out there while not reissuing, say...Gabor Szabo or Shirley Scott in droves despite them both having a ton of Impulse albums.

mr. milligan, Tuesday, 26 March 2024 15:02 (one month ago) link

I was drawn to the look of all those Impulse digipak reissues and I was seeing those three AC reissues (Journey.., Ptah.., A Monastic Trio) on essentially equal footing as not just the Sanders albums

Tbf that was my experience too but when I would talk to older friends, like the people who had hipped me to Ornette and Coltrane in the first place, they went out of their way to express how much they hated AC

chr1sb3singer, Tuesday, 26 March 2024 15:18 (one month ago) link

Fair enough xp

Marten Broadcloak, mild-mannered GOP congressman (Raymond Cummings), Tuesday, 26 March 2024 15:20 (one month ago) link

Not mention her new age/spiritual tape-era was also seen as confirmation by those same people that her music didn't have any merit

chr1sb3singer, Tuesday, 26 March 2024 15:20 (one month ago) link

My first encounter with her wasn't even about her music, it was clips from her public access show and she was just presented as some kind of weirdo cult leader. It was several more years until I heard her music, first Journey... and Ptah, because as has been mentioned they were the ones to get reissued. Then a few years later limited edition mini-LP CDs of Universal Consciousness and World Galaxy came out, and I got those, and eventually the double live album, Transfiguration. I remember the pump being pretty well primed (the Wire cover story helped) by the time Seraphic Light was announced and released.

The album it took the longest to find — Lord of Lords — is probably my favorite of her Impulse! run now. I don't think it was ever even reissued on its own, just paired up when Impulse! did a bunch of 2-albums-on-one-CD reissues a while back.

Tahuti Watches L&O:SVU Reruns Without His Ape (unperson), Tuesday, 26 March 2024 15:41 (one month ago) link

I've probably posted this here before but I really wish someone would press this on vinyl, even just her amazing version of Giant Steps https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r8xAAX198Pk

I feel like in this interview she articulates the disinterest the jazz industry has in her music.

'Journey in Satchidananda' was a game changing record for me. It was HUGE in Glasgow in the late 90s / early 2000s.

The owner of Glasgow's FOPP Records chain, Gordon (who was Terry Hall's brother in law) was a massive and lifelong Jazz fan. He realised in the mid to late 90s that many seminal Jazz labels had stopped doing vinyl releases and couldn't imagine ever doing any again (how wrong that turned out to be!). As a result they were happy to give him the vinyl license to many classic releases for a very low fee. Thus he licensed hundreds of titles and pressed up copies that were only available in the FOPP chain. He put these albums on sale at £5 which was very, very cheap even then.

This is pretty much how I got into Jazz as at £5 one couldn't really go wrong and I discovered a ton of incredible albums. Lots and lots of Glaswegians took advantage of this wild deal and as a result a LOT of people started listening to a lot of amazing Jazz records for the first time in their lives. The breakout hit by far was Alice Coltrane's 'Journey in Satchidananda' album. I believe FOPP shifted well over a thousand copies of it in the city. It was ubiquitous and I'd seem to see it at everyone's house I ever visited. I remember going into my local newsagent one Sunday morning and he was playing (a tape of) it. My newsagent was no hipster, Jazz aficionado or even a big music fan but this record had become such a cult Glasgow album that somehow this didn't seem strange at that time.

stirmonster, Tuesday, 26 March 2024 16:47 (one month ago) link

that's so awesome.

i found my copy for $20 in a williamsburg junk store around 2013. it seemed to me like an *insane* amount of money to pay for a used record at the time

budo jeru, Tuesday, 26 March 2024 16:51 (one month ago) link

I love that story - that even in the late-90s you could still have a regional cult record seems quaint in the streaming era.

xp

il lavoro mi rovina la giornata (PBKR), Tuesday, 26 March 2024 16:53 (one month ago) link

I had the 180g reissue of Journey for forever, prob since early 2000s. Recently ponied up $100 for a sweet friends deal on a 1972 pressing, no regrets.

My gateway was this cool comp, scored for like $15-20 in the late 90s:

https://www.discogs.com/release/23813663-Alice-Coltrane-Reflection-On-Creation-And-Space-A-Five-Year-View

I painted my teeth (sleeve), Tuesday, 26 March 2024 16:53 (one month ago) link

love that comp -- great cover art

budo jeru, Tuesday, 26 March 2024 17:02 (one month ago) link

I listen to jazz records but have had no contact with jazz fandom etc. so a bit surprised at the gatekeeping bullshit detailed above. I would have thought Alice was jazz royalty.
I got into buying random jazz records from a stall in Leicester market in the 90s, which would usually be £5-10. One that I picked up early on was Karma by Pharaoh Sanders, and I immediately knew this was the stuff for me. The orange Impulse spines then became a mark of quality and I'd buy any that the stall got in - the Alice ones in particular became huge favourites.

( X '____' )/ (zappi), Tuesday, 26 March 2024 17:03 (one month ago) link

Picked my vinyl copy up from FOPP in London a decade or so ago for £10! But got the Impulse digipak back in the day for £££s, no regrets.

Oh man that 5 Year View comp is (one of) my white whales

When Impulse was doing those digi-pak cd reissues in the 90s a few of them they pressed on extremely nice heavyweight lps, with gatefold covers and bumper stickers inside, (I proudly drove a white Toyota Camry with a "The New Wave of Jazz is on Impulse!" sticker for long time), I don't recall amy AC but I have a few very nice Sanders and JC lps

chr1sb3singer, Tuesday, 26 March 2024 17:51 (one month ago) link

Early in the pandemic, I had older friends give me about 200-250 records that had been in their garage for 30 years. Among a ton of other stuff, it included OG copies of Journey and Ptah as well as Pharoah Sanders, Thembi, none of which I had heard. Needless to say, my mind was blown.

il lavoro mi rovina la giornata (PBKR), Tuesday, 26 March 2024 18:33 (one month ago) link

Sanders' Thembi

il lavoro mi rovina la giornata (PBKR), Tuesday, 26 March 2024 18:33 (one month ago) link

Woah!

Thembi absolutely rules and that is a hell of a steal! As I get older, Alice's devotional music moves me the most. It's crazy that it remained obscure for so long.

Need to get on and listen to this new one.

I would prefer not to. (Chinaski), Tuesday, 26 March 2024 19:03 (one month ago) link

^ same

budo jeru, Wednesday, 27 March 2024 02:20 (one month ago) link

or, more accurately, buy this disc(s) (liner notes by EM being, i think, what's pushed me over)

budo jeru, Wednesday, 27 March 2024 02:21 (one month ago) link

love stirmonsters story, thats so amazing

waste of compute (One Eye Open), Wednesday, 27 March 2024 13:20 (one month ago) link

four weeks pass...

I was at a funeral of a friend of 40 years standing yesterday. An incredible person with incredible taste in books, music and films. A life long devoted anti-fascist too.

He is one of a small number of people I know who truly loved Alice Coltrane. in his last days i hope i gave him a little joy by sharing some Alice bootlegs with him.

At the funeral he had requested Turiya & Ramakrishna be played in its entirety. Hearing that in a room full of his nearest and dearest in such a highly chaged emotional environment was quite a moment in time!

stirmonster, Wednesday, 24 April 2024 17:54 (one week ago) link


You must be logged in to post. Please either login here, or if you are not registered, you may register here.