By now four years a widow, Coltrane was already well involved in forwarding the musical and spiritual vision her late husband had begun concocting from his worshipful magnum opus, A Love Supreme (1965). Following Trane’s death, Alice steadfastly committed herself to a life of devotional advocacy, succinctly picking up the baton of this nascent mystical branch of artistry the era-defining musician had left behind. As a matter of fact, she also used music as a springboard for her own sacred beliefs, mixing her time spent recording with travelling to India and studying under Swami Satchidananda, a leader in the Hindu-influenced movements of the time. These inspirations led Alice down a path of rigorous study of different spiritual and musical traditions that blended the intellectual side of American jazz with the transcendental qualities of Eastern mysticism. The results, as realised by some of the finest players in jazz alongside fellow Swami devotees, remain breathtaking.
The gala concert was one of two halves, with the first two transcendental tunes, ‘Journey in Satchidananda’ and ‘Shiva-Loka’ taken from Alice’s Journey in Satchidananda (1971) – the trailblazing album she had just released on Impulse! – followed by two more explosive tunes, ‘Africa’ and ‘Leo’, both penned by her partner and former collaborator. Sanders and Shepp are the perfect players for the job, having both sat in with Coltrane at some point throughout his career – both on the unvanquishable Ascension (1966) and, in Sanders’ case, as a full-time sideman in Trane’s avant-garde pursuits.
The biggest contrast to that which came before is the overall tone of the performance. Listen to recordings made of Albert Ayler or Ornette Coleman’s performances at John’s funeral in 1967, and you will hear passionate cries entrenched in unmistakeable grief. Thanks to the spiritual guidance of her guru, Alice had begun to find her light out of the darkness by the time of the Carnegie Hall performance. With Sanders and Shepp at the helm, the saxophonist’s role in her ensemble had finally moved from pallbearers to torchbearers, no longer caught up in a reflective eulogy but finally ready to pave the way forward by treading new ground.