| | Charles Lloyd Jumping The Creek CD Charles Lloyd Discography of CDs
(3 Customer Reviews)
 |
|
Our Price: $14.69 CDFor Sale Usually ships in 1-2 days
Our Price: $9.90
|  |
Since making a middle-of-life comeback in the 1990s, saxophonist, composer, and bandleader Charles Lloyd has continually issued fascinating recordings. While some of them contain missteps, it's not for lack of ambition. For one of jazz's elder statesmen, Lloyd pushes his envelope of ideas about improvisation, rhythm and harmony, often to the breaking point. He is a player who sets sometimes impossibly high goals for himself, but in so doing, gives listeners something to really hold on to when encountering one of his albums or seeing him live. Jumping the Creek, which continues his association with ECM Records, is another compelling affair. The band -- pianist Geri Allen, bassist Robert Hurst and drummer Eric Harland -- is simply outstanding. Allen, particularly, hasn't shined on a record like this thus far this decade. Lloyd's compositional ideas here come from rhythmic phrases, small harmonic vamps and emotional thematics. Lloyd engages his quartet in various ways, sometimes in duets, sometimes trios, sometimes as a full band, often during the same composition. The whole quartet does engage fully on the 13-plus-minute opener "Ne Me Quitte Pas," with skeletal phrases becoming larger, striated harmonic statements as Allen uses both modal and post-bop concerns to flesh out the body of the tune. The saxophone/drums duet in "Ken Katta Ma Om," is an utterly lovely change-up that follows. The rest of the band doesn't even enter until halfway through. And Allen does this as a way of introducing a contrapuntal solo that touches upon both Andrew Hill and Lennie Tristano. The title track uses trio and quartet settings to explore the various tensions in melody. Lloyd is a master of moving from gorgeous, gently swinging balladry to blues-drenched free blowing, on a dime. "The Sufi's Tears" features Lloyd on taragato -- a soprano saxophone-like instrument used in Middle Eastern and Indian music. Accompanied only by Hurst's bowed bass, the mournful melody slips off into ether as improvisation wanders into the heart of the frame and remains. It's exotic and tight. "Georgia Bright Smile," is another long work in which the band changes configurations repeatedly in the course of its execution, winding around Lloyd's themes and Allen's painterly pianism. Hurst is particularly impressive here as he trades fours with Allen in his solo. Ultimately however, this, like Lloyd's other recordings on ECM is about emotion, feeling, and a sense of peace and serenity. Lloyd uses the rough places in his improvisations, to be sure, but it is only to make the rough places plain, limpid, utterly integrated in a serene whole. On Jumping the Creek he succeeds seamlessly and ups his own artistic ante. ~ Thom Jurek
Liner Note Author: Stanley Crouch.
Recording information: Cello Studios, Los Angeles, CA (01/2004).
Photographer: Dorothy Darr.
Personnel: Charles Lloyd (alto saxophone, tenor saxophone); Charles Lloyd (tarogato); Geri Allen (piano); Robert Hurst (double bass); Eric Harland (drums, percussion).
Audio Mixers: Talley Sherwood; Dominic Camardella.
Down Beat (p.68) - 4 stars out of 5 - "Along with an achingly beautiful tone on tenor, he's now added alto saxophone to the mix. His soaring, serpentine lines on the alto bring a new dimension to his playing." JazzTimes (p.104) - "[H]e still hasn't lost his intensity and sense of adventure....This is a superb album, and Charles Lloyd gets better with each passing year." Charles Lloyd Jumping The Creek Songs Jumping The Creek Music Review Average Rating: (5 out of 5 stars)   Absolutely amazing This album is incredible. The band plays so well together and is really tight, it's really a beautiful thing. Of course all the solos are killing, because it's like the band is soloing. Geri Allen esp has some incredible things to offer. Submitted by Andy (Buffalo, NY) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Master Musician The latest Lloyd offering is in keeping with the excellence I've come to expect from this master musician. I maybe biases as Charles Lloyd has been a favorite of mine for 40 years, but I would recommend this CD to a newcomer to the "jazz" idiom. A wonderful CD showing great command and depth of all of his intstruments. The CD also offers his excellent sidemen the opportunity to display their considerable skills. Submitted by globalorrin (Chicago, IL) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Alto epiphany Great record, highly recommended
full range of emotions and moods -
and Lloyd's alto playing has such a
beautiful sound Submitted by ddooth (Brooklyn, NY) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
| Have you heard this album? |  |
Purchase Jumping The Creek CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart
|