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Charles Lloyd: Defiant Warrior Still On Song

Ever the dreamer, I naively thought I could wipe out the ugliness in the world with beauty. In this era of my youth there was a collective effort through song, through protest, through writing, through art—to right the ship. I was intent on making a contribution.
Charles Lloyd
Anyone going to jazz festivals in summer 1966, and lucky enough to catch the Charles Lloyd Quartet, will likely have one tune in particular imprinted on their memory. Not because Lloyd had already twice recorded "Forest Flower"first with

Chico Hamilton
drums1921 - 2013

Keith Jarrett
pianob.1945

Cecil McBee
bassb.1935

Jack DeJohnette
drumsb.1942
When Forest Flower (Atlantic) was released in early 1967, it was the first jazz album to chime with the emerging counterculture. "I play love vibrations," Lloyd told Time magazine that year. "I bring everyone together in a joyous dance." It might be argued that

John Coltrane
saxophone1926 - 1967

Pharoah Sanders
saxophone, tenor1940 - 2022
And still, in 2024, Lloyd is hitting the spot, with his 2CD set The Sky Will Still Be There Tomorrow (Blue Note). Check the opening track, "Defiant, Tender Warrior," in the YouTube at the conclusion of this article.
After serving his apprenticeship in the first half of the 1960s as musical director of Chico Hamilton and Cannonball Adderley's bands, spending around two years with each, Lloyd formed his classic quartet in early 1966. The musical concept was Lloyd's, but the contribution Keith Jarrett made to the music cannot be overestimated. The band was a highwater mark of its era, as is apparent on the albums made for Atlantic between 1966 and 1968. Three of them are included in the Top Ten Albums list below.
The break-up of the classic quartet
The demise of the classic quartet in 1968 was fractious, with money unsurprisingly cast as the villain. In Keith Jarrett: The Man and His Music (Grafton, 1991), author
Ian Carr
trumpet1933 - 2009

Ron McClure
bassb.1941
But recollections may vary and perceived injustices may be viewed differently following the passage of time. In his brief essay in the liner booklet of Montreux Jazz Festival 1967 (TCB), released in 2019, Ron McClure had nothing but good to say of his time with Lloyd. "My tenure with this group was a life experience that changed and enlightened me on many levels," wrote McClure. "This wasn't a band. It was a movement, a shining beacon of light in the world of music. Nothing compares to what I gained from the years I spent in the Charles Lloyd Quartet." DeJohnette is quoted saying: "We were all young, full of ego and occasionally played great music."
The booklet, however, contains no words from Jarrett. But when Lloyd signed with ECM in 1989, Jarrett had been the label's most productive artist for almost two decades; if he still bore a grudge against Lloyd, it seems inconceivable that ECM founder Manfred Eicher would have signed him. Then again, Lloyd and Jarrett did not begin recording together again either (the prospect of which would have had a more commercially driven label's finance department over-ventilating with excitement).
Anyway, however the cards fell in 1968, time moves on. Lloyd, Jarrett, McBee, McClure and Johnette each went on to successful careers. Lloyd was away for much of the 1970s; we do not really know why, though his work with members of the Beach Boys and Quicksilver Messenger Service offers a hint. But he returned in 1982 with Montreux 82 (Elektra/Musician, 1983), with

Michel Petrucciani
piano1962 - 1999
In the notes to The Sky Will Still Be There Tomorrow, Lloyd, referring to the Forest Flower era, says: "Ever the dreameras a young manI naively thought I could wipe out the ugliness in the world with beauty. In this era of my youth there was a collective effort through song, through protest, through writing, through artto right the ship. I was intent on making a contribution to humanity. For a brief time we perceived a change, but it was not lasting and began to crumble. In my wildest dreams I never imagined the world to be in this place. Now."
But Lloyd is not giving up. He concludes his liner note thus: "And so, All My Relations, my inclination to put down the saxophone and go back to the woods has been staved off for another season. This is my offering to you."
Charles Lloyd: Ten Essential Albums
Lloyd recorded sixteen albums for ECM between 1989 and 2012 and each of them is good enough to justify a place in this Top Ten. The same can be said of the ten Blue Notes recorded between 2013 and 2023. The three ECMs and two Blue Notes which figure below may thus be regarded simply as personal favourites.
Man From Two Worlds
Impulse!
1964
Lloyd began making his mark in 1960, when he replaced

Eric Dolphy
woodwinds1928 - 1964

Chico Hamilton
drums1921 - 2013

Gabor Szabo
guitar1936 - 1982

Discovery!
Columbia
1964
Lloyd's debut under his own name, recorded six months after Man From Two Worlds. The band is a quartet, with

Don Friedman
piano1935 - 2016
Eddie Khan
bass, acousticb.1935

Richard Davis
bass, acoustic1930 - 2023

Roy Haynes
drums1926 - 2024
J.C. Moses
drumsb.1936

Henry Mancini
composer / conductor1924 - 1994

Dream Weaver
Atlantic
1966
.... Which he did in early 1966. Dream Weaver, recorded in late March that year, was the album which launched the Lloyd/Jarrett/McBee/DeJohnette band and laid the groundwork for Forest Flower. The disc opens with the three-part "Autumn Suite," built around the standard "Autumn Leaves," which Lloyd had recorded on The Chico Hamilton Special (Columbia, 1961). While affirming the quartet's place in the tradition, Lloyd's 1966 arrangement of the tune takes it into fresh territory, particularly through his soulful flute and Jarrett's penchant for reaching inside the piano to play the strings harp-fashion. Lloyd is on tenor for the next three tracks, the originals "Dream Weaver," "Bird Flight" and "Love Ship," establishing his consonant interpretation of

John Coltrane
saxophone1926 - 1967

Forest Flower
Atlantic
1967
Recorded at the Monterey jazz festival on September 18, 1966, "Forest Flower: Sunrise" and "Forest Flower: Sunset" make up the first seventeen minutes of Forest Flower, in spellbinding performances in which Jarrett, particularly on "Sunset," contributes every bit as much of the magic as does Lloyd. The rest of the album also precisely reflected the out-there zeitgeist blossoming in Europe and the US: Jarrett's firecracker, "Sorcery," on which he and Lloyd (on flute) go beyond consonance to touch on territory adjacent to

Cecil Taylor
piano1929 - 2018

Stan Getz
saxophone, tenor1927 - 1991

Love-In
Atlantic
1967
Patchy it might beLloyd's flute ditty "Temple Bells" and Lennon and McCartney's "Here There And Everywhere" make too many concessions to the audience at San Francisco's Fillmore West, where this album was recorded in January 1967. But the low points are brief, and Jarrett's solo on the second tune is enduringly good. The highs provide ample redress: Lloyd's gritty opener "Tribal Dance," two Jarrett pieces, the funky "Is It Really The Same?" and gospel-infused Jarrett feature "Sunday Morning," and Lloyd's exuberant closer, "Memphis Dues Again/Island Blues," are substantial. Originally planned as a half-hour filler appearance, the Fillmore audience responded so enthusiastically that the Quartet played for over ninety minutes; at the end of 1967 Atlantic released a second album from the same event, Journey Within.

Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991

The Water Is Wide
ECM
2000
And with one bound we leap forward 33 years, such is the extent of Lloyd's discography .... With the exception of those Beach Boys/QMS sessions in the 1970s, Lloyd had recorded with quartets almost exclusively since his first own-name album, Discovery!, in 1964. For The Water Is Wide, his seventh ECM release, he expanded to a quintet with

Brad Mehldau
pianob.1970

John Abercrombie
guitar1944 - 2017

Larry Grenadier
bass, acousticb.1966

Billy Higgins
drums1936 - 2001

Hoagy Carmichael
piano1899 - 1981

Duke Ellington
piano1899 - 1974

Billy Strayhorn
piano1915 - 1967

Which Way Is East
ECM
2004
Lloyd's musical relationship with Billy Higgins was among the closest he has enjoyed to date, and possibly his closest spiritual relationship with another musician, too. Which Way Is East, a duo album, was recorded in January 2001, some four months before Higgins passed. Unusually for an ECM release it contains a lengthy liner note, the transcript of a conversation between Lloyd and Higgins which occurred sometime between the recording of the album and Higgins' passing in May that year. Music making is centre stage and mortality is hovering in the wings: both men know Higgins' days are numbered. The words are, of course, moving, but the big takeaway is the light shed on Lloyd and Higgins' approach to musicmaking. The 2CD album is divided into eight suites; some of the heads are by Lloyd, some are by Higgins and some are co-written. Lloyd is heard on tenor and alto saxophones, bass, alto and C flutes, piano, taragato, Tibetan oboe, percussion, maracas and voice. Higgins is heard on drums, guitar, guimbri, Syrian one-string lute, Senegalese, Guinean and Indian hand drums, Juno's wood box, percussion and voice. Playing time is two hours and twenty-five minutes and the two musicians are at their exalted best throughout.

Lift Every Voice
ECM
2002
Another double album and another deep one. Recorded in January and February 2002, Lift Every Voice is Lloyd's response to 9/11. He leads the The Water Is Wide sextet with Mehldau replaced by

Geri Allen
piano1957 - 2017

Billy Hart
drumsb.1940

Marc Johnson
bassb.1953

Tone Poem
Blue Note
2021
As we grow older, many of us become set in our ways. Others, Lloyd among them, venture into new territory, while, in Lloyd's case, digging deeper into what they have already achieved. Tone Poem is Lloyd's third album with The Marvels, a twin-guitar quintet completed by guitarists

Bill Frisell
guitar, electricb.1951

Greg Leisz
guitar, steel
Reuben Rogers
bass, acoustic
Eric Harland
drumsb.1976

Ornette Coleman
saxophone, alto1930 - 2015

Thelonious Monk
piano1917 - 1982

Norah Jones
pianob.1979

Willie Nelson
guitar
Lucinda Williams
vocals
The Sky Will Still Be There Tomorrow
Blue Note
2024
Lloyd returns to quartet format for this magnificent 2024 2CD set, with a new lineup completed by pianist

Jason Moran
pianob.1975

Larry Grenadier
bass, acousticb.1966

Brian Blade
drumsb.1970

Billy Higgins
drums1936 - 2001
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