| Recorded between April and June of 1971, Alice Coltrane's Universal Consciousness 
        stands as her classic work. As a testament to the articulation of her 
        spiritual principles, Universal Consciousness stands even above World 
        Galaxy as a recording where the medium of music, both composed and improvised, 
        perfectly united the realms of body (in performance), speech (in the utterance 
        of individual instrumentalists and group interplay), and mind (absolute 
        focus) for the listener to take into her or his own experience. While 
        many regard Universal Consciousness as a "jazz" album, it transcends 
        even free jazz by its reliance on deeply thematic harmonic material and 
        the closely controlled sonic dynamics in its richly hued chromatic palette. 
        The set opens with the title track, where strings engage large washes 
        of Coltrane's harp as Jack DeJohnette's drums careen in a spirit dance 
        around the outer edge of the maelstrom. On first listen, the string section 
        and the harp are in counter-dictum, moving against each other in a modal 
        cascade of sounds, but this soon proves erroneous as Coltrane's harp actually 
        embellishes the timbral glissandos pouring forth. Likewise, Jimmy Garrison's 
        bass seeks to ground the proceedings to DeJohnette's singing rhythms, 
        and finally Coltrane moves the entire engagement to another dimension 
        with her organ. Leroy Jenkins' violin and Garrison's bottom two strings 
        entwine one another in Ornette Coleman's transcription as Coltrane and 
        the other strings offer a middling bridge for exploration. It's breathtaking. 
        On "Battle at Armageddon," the violence depicted is internal; 
        contrapuntal rhythmic impulses whirl around each other as Coltrane's organ 
        and harp go head to head with Rashied Ali's drums. "Oh Allah" 
        rounds out side one with a gorgeously droning, awe-inspiring modal approach 
        to whole-tone music that enfolds itself into the lines of organic polyphony 
        as the strings color each present theme intervalically. DeJohnette's brushwork 
        lisps the edges and Garrison's bass underscores each chord and key change 
        in Coltrane's constant flow of thought. On side two, "Hare Krishna" is a chant-like piece that is birthed 
        from minor-key ascendancy with a loping string figure transcribed by Coleman 
        from Coltrane's composition on the organ. She lays deep in the cut, offering 
        large shimmering chords that twirl -- eventually -- around high-register 
        ostinatos and pedal work. It's easily the most beautiful and accessible 
        track in the set, in that it sings with a devotion that has at its base 
        the full complement of Coltrane's compositional palette. "Sita Ram" 
        is a piece that echoes "Hare Krishna" in that it employs Garrison 
        and drummer Clifford Jarvis, but replaces the strings with a tamboura 
        player. Everything here moves very slowly, harp and organ drift into and 
        out of one another like breath, and the rhythm section -- informed by 
        the tamboura's drone -- lilts on Coltrane's every line. As the single-fingered 
        lines engage the rhythm section more fully toward the end of the tune, 
        it feels like a soloist improvising over a chanting choir. Finally, the 
        album ends with another duet between Ali and Coltrane. Ali uses wind chimes 
        as well as his trap kit, and what transpires between the two is an organically 
        erected modal architecture, where texture and timbre offer the faces of 
        varying intervals: Dynamic, improvisational logic and tonal exploration 
        become elemental figures in an intimate yet universal conversation that 
        has the search itself and the uncertain nature of arrival, either musically 
        or spiritually, at its root. This ambiguity is the only way a recording 
        like this could possibly end, with spiritual questioning and yearning 
        in such a musically sophisticated and unpretentious way. The answers to 
        those questions can perhaps be found in the heart of the music itself, 
        but more than likely they can, just as they are articulated here, only 
        be found in the recesses of the human heart. This is art of the highest 
        order, conceived by a brilliant mind, poetically presented in exquisite 
        collaboration by divinely inspired musicians and humbly offered as a gift 
        to listeners. It is a true masterpiece. The CD reissue by Universal comes 
        with a handsome Japanese-style five-by-five-inch paper sleeve with liner 
        notes reprinted inside and devastatingly gorgeous 24-bit remastering. 
       (by Thom Jurek, All 
        Music Guide) |