Drummer
Rashied Ali was a progenitor and leading exponent of the multidirectional rhythms/polytonal percussion known as "free jazz" drumming. He is arguably best known for being saxophonist
John Coltrane's duet partner on the blistering
Interstellar Space album. Recorded in 1967, it wasn't released until 1974.
Ali was able to match the physical demands in the music while empathizing with its spiritual concerns. He debuted with
Coltrane's group formally on
Meditations, which also featured
Pharoah Sanders in its lineup. After
McCoy Tyner and
Elvin Jones left the band in 1966,
Ali became the lone drummer alongside the saxophonist, pianist
Alice Coltrane, and bassist
Jimmy Garrison.
Ali created the Survival Records label with
Frank Lowe to issue his own recordings after he left
Alice's group in 1971. He released Duo Exchange in the company of saxophonist
Lowe in 1973, and recorded and toured with artists ranging from
Noah Howard,
Sangeeta, and Phalanx to
Jaco Pastorius,
Charles Gayle, and
Tisziji Munoz. He founded the avant-jazz outfit Prima Materia, which released three albums with Knitting Factory, including 1994's Peace on Earth: The Music of John Coltrane.
Ali recorded another pair of duo albums with bassist
Henry Grimes shortly before the latter's death the following year: Going to the Ritual and
Spirits Aloft.
Ali was born and raised in Philadelphia. His mother sang with
Jimmie Lunceford and his brother,
Muhammad Ali, was also a drummer who later played with
Albert Ayler.
Ali, his brother, and father converted to Islam. He began his musical career in the U.S. Army. After returning from the service, he played with local Philly R&B groups, including
Big Maybelle, before moving on to play jazz with locals
Lee Morgan,
Don Patterson, and
Jimmy Smith.
In the early '60s,
Ali moved to New York and became a fixture on the avant-garde "new thing" jazz scene. Besides joining saxophonist
Sonny Rollins' band for a tour of Japan in 1963, he regularly backed up the efforts of pioneers such as
Don Cherry,
Pharoah Sanders,
Paul Bley,
Archie Shepp,
Bill Dixon, and
Albert Ayler. It was during this period that
Ali made his first major recording debut on
Archie Shepp's
On This Night, and on the
Marion Brown Quartet's self-titled offering. The drummer sat in with
John Coltrane's group at the Half Note and other clubs around Manhattan. The saxophonist recruited
Ali for his large-group free jazz project
Ascension, and praised the drummer for his ability to play "multi-directional" rhythms, providing the soloist maximum freedom. But
Ali dropped out shortly before the session.
Coltrane didn't give up and hired the drummer to play in the expanded lineup for
Meditations, but
Tyner was dissatisfied with the album and the live setup: He claimed he couldn't hear himself with two drummers. He left after the album was finished and
Jones followed him out the door in 1966. The saxophonist's wife
Alice Coltrane became the group's new pianist and
Ali its drummer.
In late February of 1967, the saxophonist met
Ali at
Rudy Van Gelder's New Jersey studio. It was a week after the band had cut the music that would be released as
Stellar Regions in 1994. He never told
Ali this would be a duo session. The melodies
Coltrane employed with
Ali referenced those found on the
Stellar Regions material, and in fact, they often overlap: the selection "Venus" has the same melody as the title track of the previous album, while "Mars" quotes the melody of what later became known as "Iris." Fatefully,
Interstellar Space was shelved after
Coltrane's passage in 1967.
Ali headed for Europe and gigged in Copenhagen, Germany, and Sweden before studying with
Philly Joe Jones in England. In 1968
Ali returned to the States and played on
Alice Coltrane's
A Monastic Trio,
Jackie McLean's
'Bout Soul, and
Marion Brown's
Why Not? In 1969 he continued with
Alice on
Huntington Ashram Monastery and played on
Alan Shorter's
Orgasm in between trips to Europe.
In 1970,
Ali began trying to improve the lot of jazz musicians, especially their ability to control their own music, receive its proceeds, and find venues to work in. He briefly joined
Gary Bartz's
NTU Troop for the album Home for Milestone. He continued working with
Alice on
Journey in Satchidananda as well, and formed Survival Records in 1971 to issue his own recordings. He made his last recording with
Alice,
Universal Consciousness, in 1971. The following year
Ali founded Ali's Alley, a club for non-commercial and "loft" jazz acts until 1979. In 1973,
Ali and
Frank Lowe issued Duo Exchange, the inaugural offering from Survival, a set of spontaneous sax and drum jams that gained positive reviews.
1974 saw the official release of
Interstellar Space. The original album featured four tracks: "Mars" (titled "C Major" in the ABC/Paramount session sheets), "Venus" (titled "Dream Chant" in the session sheets), "Jupiter," and "Saturn." Two more tracks from the session, "Leo" and "Jupiter Variation," later appeared on the compilation album Jupiter Variation in 1978. A 2000 reissue collected all of the tracks from the session, including false starts for "Jupiter Variation."
Ali felt validated at long last, given the overwhelmingly positive reviews of the set, but otherwise quietly went about doing his own thing. He released more albums for Survival including 1973's Rashied Ali Quintet with
James Blood Ulmer, New Directions in Modern Music with
Carlos Ward,
Fred Simmons,
Stafford James, and Moon Flight (unreleased until the '90s) and Swift Are the Winds of Life, a 1975 duo offering with violinist
Leroy Jenkins.
Ali participated in a "Dialogue of the Drums" concert with
Milford Graves and
Andrew Cyrille in the mid-'70s. He kept a low profile in the '80s aside from drumming in the
James Blood Ulmer/
George Adams/
David Murray group Phalanx. In 1984 he played a live duo gig with bassist
Jaco Pastorius; it was issued as Blackbird nearly a decade later. In 1989
Ali resumed recording under his own name with Rashied Ali in France (Blue Music Group).
The drummer played with
Charles Gayle and bassist
William Parker on the widely heralded FMP release Touchin' on Trane in 1993, and followed it with Songlines, a trio date with
Peter Brotzman and
Fred Hopkins in 1994, the same year
Stellar Regions was finally released.
Ali formed the Prima Materia quintet with saxophonists
Allan Chase and
Louie Belogenis, bassist
Joe Gallant, and pianist
Greg Murphy. They issued Peace on Earth: The Music of John Coltrane, and re-recorded
Coltrane's
Meditations for Knitting Factory. Released in 1995, the critical reviews were universally positive. The following year, Prima Materia re-recorded
Albert Ayler's Bells. In 1997,
Ali participated in two recordings with
William Parker and
Ivo Perelman, the studio outing Sad Life and Live.
That same year, the drummer began an extensive recording and working relationship with guitarist
Tisziji Munoz that resulted in the release of a dozen albums between 1997 and 2003 and three more after
Ali's death in 2009. They include four 1997 dates: River of Blood, Present Without a Trace, Spirit World, and Alpha-Nebula. All but the last one featured
Sanders (
Munoz's former boss). Three more appeared in 1999 including Presence of Truth, Presence of Joy, and Presence of Mastery. Five additional albums were issued between 2000 and 2003, including Breaking the Wheel of Life and Death, Parallel Reality (with
Ravi Coltrane), Hu-Man Spirit, Shaman-Bala, and
Divine Radiance. The latter featured
Ali in the company of both
Ravi and
Sanders bassist
Cecil McBee, and pianist
Paul Shaffer.
Ali's double album Judgment Day was recorded in February 2005 with
Jumaane Smith on trumpet, Lawrence Clark on tenor saxophone,
Greg Murphy on piano, and
Joris Teepe on bass. It was cut at
Ali's Survival Studio. In addition to his performance activities,
Ali mentored young drummers.
In 2007,
Ali recorded Going to the Ritual for Porter in duo with bassist/violinist
Henry Grimes. They played five duo concerts between 2007 and 2009 and a sixth in June 2007 with pianist
Marilyn Crispell. A second duo recording was in post-production at the time of
Ali's death from a heart attack in August 2009. Before his passing,
Ali was the featured drummer on saxophonist
Azar Lawrence's album Mystic Journey, released in 2010, just after
Spirits Aloft, the second duo outing with
Grimes.
In 2013,
Munoz released Divine Radiance Live with the same lineup that played its studio date.
Rashied Ali's Survival Records label was relaunched in 2019. Its two maiden releases were expanded vinyl-only reissues of the complete Duo Exchange sessions and Live at Slugs captured in 1967. These and future Survival releases will be overseen by
Ali's widow, Patricia. ~ Thom Jurek