Voice in the Night

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com
It's Charles Lloyd again on ECM, a label that understood his grace-under-fire approach and appreciated his distinct voice when others carped that his approach was too meditational. For this recording ECM gives Lloyd an all-star band to work with: drummer Billy Higgins, John Abercrombie, and Dave Holland . The results caught here suggest that Lloyd is at his best with the conceptual enrichment that a great rhythm section provides. There's a return to one-time hot tune "Forest Flower" and other Lloyd period pieces, but also some new compositions and Elvis Costello and Burt Bacharach's "God Give Me Strength" and Billy Strayhorn's "A Flower Is a Lovesome Thing." Through it all, guitarist Abercrombie is delicately funky, and Holland and Higgins play with a guileless intensity that makes Lloyd seem quite appropriate, and maybe even essential, to our moment. --John F. Szwed

From Jazziz
Comfortable - that's exactly the way the music sounds on charles lloyd's latest outing, though the tenor saxophonist is part of a quartet. Of course, coziness isn't always the best setting for keen jazz improvisation. But when clever participants feel snug enough to let their ideas pour forth, heights can be reached. Lloyd was born nine days before Kuhn in 1938, and both are of a similar mind in terms of form. Voice in the Night, Lloyd's sixth outing for ECM, reveals how facile structures can yield enigmatic playing. Backed by bassist Dave Holland, guitarist John Abercrombie, and drummer Billy Higgins, the horn player has come up with a free-flowing treatise on eloquence. Lloyd's isn't the first name that rolls off the tongue when it comes to discussing imposing tenor players. Like Kuhn, he is a tad overlooked. Hopefully, the fluid moves of these eight new pieces will clear some of the haze surrounding the power of his art. As each year passes, he polishes his approach a bit more. With a fascinating way of instilling the drive of more aggressive music into languid statements, he turns the tensile girders of hard bop into utterly flexible cables. There are moments on Voice in the Night - "Pocket Full of Blues" and Lloyd's hippie anthem "Forest Flower," for example - where the music just steadily unfurls. Much of the credit for this effortless groove goes to drummer Billy Higgins. When Lloyd used the drummer on a Knitting Factory gig at the New York Jazz Festival last summer, critics were referencing it for days afterward. As far as grace goes, Higgins has no current competition on his instrument. Swirling his brushes over the snare, he ferries the rest of the band to myriad destinations. Enjoying the ride, Lloyd's horn offers eddies of golden tone on pieces as different as the Elvis Costello-Burt Bacharach melodrama "God Give Me Strength" and Billy Strayhorn's poetic "A Flower Is a Lovesome Thing." This is one of the saxophonist's finest outings.

--- JAZZIZ Magazine Copyright © 2000, Milor Entertainment, Inc.

Voice in the Night

Voice in the Night,Charles Lloyd,Ecm Records,Crossover Jazz,Hard Bop,Jazz,Jazz Music,Pop

Jazz Music:

  1. Yasmina, A Black Woman [Special Edition]
  2. Yesterdays [Import]
  3. Yesterdays: Stan Getz Plays the Standards
  4. 1951-1953
  5. 1st Bassman
  6. A Proper Introduction to Dodo Marmarosa: Dodo's Dance
  7. A Time for the Soul
  8. A Valentine for Fred Katz
  9. Album
  10. Almost Twilight

Jazz Music

jazz music

Jazz Music

So You Ruined Your Life

Debussy Preludes Livres I & II

Introducing Jane Fielding [Import]

Music: Strategies Against Architecture 2

My Salsoul Presents: The Foundations of House [Import]

Gotta Getcha Pt.2 [CD-single] [Enhanced] [Import]

International Music: 21 Seiki No Murabito Tachi 21 [Import]

In a Coma: 1995-2005 [Import]

Heart Attacks [Import]

Haydn: 6 "Paris" Symphonies

Live Across America [Import]

Koln Concert [Gold CD] [Import]

Grandes Exitos, Vol. 2 [Import]

Amar

Thirty Years of Maximum R&B