Alice Coltrane - WBCN-FM, Boston, Massachusetts, April 2, 1972
Always read the footnotes, people! You never know what sweet tidbits are lurking in the back of the book. Case in point, Andy Beta's recent/recommended Alice Coltrane bio Cosmic Music features this enticing info about an unheard Boston radio broadcast from 1972:
“Alice’s group that night features Frank Lowe on saxophone, John Blair on violin and leading a string section from the New England Conservatory, and a tabla player/percussionist. No bassist or drummer. Without a true rhythm section, the set has a curious floating, unmoored pacing, led by Alice’s otherworldly bass tones on the Wurlitzer. The set draws from World Galaxy and features rare performances of ‘Galaxy in Turiya’ and an expansive read of 'Galaxy in Satchidananda.’”
Holy Lord of Lords, Batman! This whole recording has yet to surface, but Andy was kind enough to play that "Galaxy in Satchinananda" — all 25 minutes of it — on a recent appearance on WFMU's Observations of Deviance program. And it's amazing! Astonishing! Hopefully, more of it gets out there at some point. In the meantime, you can enjoy the rest of the Observations, which features an interview with Andy, plus his selection of rare / cool Alice music.
Alice Says: I do get very deeply engaged spiritually in the music. Because it’s a spiritual language for me, it’s not a musical language. Music is a spiritual language for me, today. Throughout the years you go through academia with chords, and how to voice that and things like that. Today, music is a spiritual language and I’m expressing, articulating deep feeling and deep experience in life, in spiritual life, in God.










