Home » Jazz Articles » Album Review » Charles Lloyd: 8: Kindred Spirits (Live at The Lobero)
Charles Lloyd: 8: Kindred Spirits (Live at The Lobero)
By
Charles Lloyd
saxophoneb.1938
Like infant song, like whale song, Lloyd's first words on his eightieth-birthday album is a wail. From there each player steps into the leader's orbit, holds his own against Lloyd's inevitable, gravitational pull, then downshifts into a Grateful Dead-like rush to tumble and calm, riding the impossibly good vibe all the way through "Requiem" and beyond. This is a chance to celebrate that Lloyd has thought larger thoughts than many of us and was never afraid to let us in on them. So "Requiem" recounts the birthing process while the rest of the two or so hours examines how we take our post-natal hours out to party on.
A biting-at-the-bit Lloyd and his generational side-kicks, the impossibly effervescent pianist

Gerald Clayton
piano
Eric Harland
drumsb.1976

Julian Lage
guitar, electric
Reuben Rogers
bass, acoustic
Booker T. Jones
keyboardsb.1944
Those two quiet stops are immaculate. Clayton is glorious on "La Llorona," turning the pensive, Mexican folk song of an unloved woman who drowns her sons in a river of tears into an artfully crafted meditation, providing an oasis of silence sadly absent from our collective consciousness. Lage doodles balletically alongside him and then Lloyd enters as the voice of the unloved, majestically redeemed. "Part5 Ruminations" falls into space. Harland is subtle brawn while the octogenarian and guitarist dodge and duet.
The two guys go sacred when Booker T. arrives on "Abide with Me," the hymn from I Long to See You" (Blue Note, 2016). Though Lage interprets the spider-like and earthy lines of the song's its first incarnation with

Bill Frisell
guitar, electricb.1951
8, with its celebrations of classical movement, Motown, world groove and the Grateful Dead, is Lloyd's symphony. Shifts in meter and mood amble and dance. Jones' layers clouds of B3 for Lage to fly through. Lloyd's flute soars, his sax takes up the many voices of his trip. You haven't heard "Shenandoah" until you hear it in this triumphant setting. As hokey as it sounds, "Forest Flower," first heard back in the 1960s, blooms in era-technicolor in a time of species extinction. "Green Onions" brings a big big smile to the face and a kick in your step. This is a great album, period. ">
Track Listing
Dream Weaver; Requiem; La Llorona; Part5, Ruminations; Abide with Me; A Song for Charles; Island Blues; Shenandoah; Sombrero Sam; Green Onions; Forest Flower; You Are So Beautiful.
Personnel
Charles Lloyd
saxophoneCharles Lloyd: tenor saxophone, flutes; Julian Page: guitar; Gerald Clayton: piano; Reuben Rogers: bass; Eric Harland: drums; Booker T. Jones: organ (#5, 12) vocal (6); Don Was: bass (#11)
Album information
Title: 8: Kindred Spirits (Live at The Lobero) | Year Released: 2020 | Record Label: Blue Note Records
Tags
Comments
PREVIOUS / NEXT
Charles Lloyd Concerts
Charles Lloyd Sky Trio Featuring Larry Grenadier &...
Soka Performing Arts CenterAliso Viejo, CA
Support All About Jazz
