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Dreamweaver - The Charles Lloyd Anthology: The Atlantic Years 1966-1969

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Dreamweaver - The Charles Lloyd Anthology: The Atlantic Years 1966-1969 album cover
01
Autumn Sequence
Artist: Charles Lloyd Quartet
12:01
02
Dream Weaver: Meditation, Dervish Dance
Artist: Charles Lloyd Quartet
11:36
03
Love Ship
Artist: Charles Lloyd Quartet
5:55 $0.99
04
Sombrero Sam
Artist: Charles Lloyd Quartet
5:17
$0.99
05
Forest Flower - Sunrise [Live@Monterey]
7:30
$0.99
06
Forest Flower - Sunset [Live@Monterey]
10:37
07
Sorcery [Live@Monterey]
5:19
$0.99
08
Little Wahid's Day
Artist: Charles Lloyd Quartet
6:27
$0.69
09
Wilpan's
Artist: Charles Lloyd Quartet
6:50 $0.69
10
Tribal Dance [Live Estonia USSR]
Artist: Charles Lloyd Quartet
10:22
11
Temple Bells [Live Version]
Artist: Charles Lloyd Quartet
2:59 $0.69
12
Love In [Live Version]
Artist: Charles Lloyd Quartet
4:58 $0.69
13
Memphis Dues Again - Island Blues [Live Version]
Artist: Charles Lloyd Quartet
9:10 $0.69
14
Journey Within [LP Version]
Artist: Charles Lloyd Quartet
11:28
15
Lonesome Child: Song / Dance [Live @ The Fillmore]
Artist: Charles Lloyd Quartet
10:53
16
Love Song To A Baby [Live Estonia USSR]
Artist: Charles Lloyd Quartet
12:32
17
Voice In The Night [at the Town Hall, New York City, November, 1968]
9:06
$0.69
Album Information

Total Tracks: 17   Total Length: 143:00

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Great stuff, bargain price

MarkSullivan

I've always had the impression these recordings were lightweight, popularized jazz. Couldn't be more wrong! This is creative, high energy acoustic jazz. The band had chemistry, and they really went for it. DeJohnette & Jarrett were terrific even this early in their careers, and Lloyd was no slouch. You get two CDs worth of material for 12 credits, too. Revised: now $6.60, still a bargain.

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They Say All Music Guide

Saxophonist, flutist, composer, and bandleader Charles Lloyd has assembled a sizable catalog since he left Cannonball Adderley’s band in the early 1960s. While most of his early recordings for Atlantic are now considered slight in contrast to his later ones, especially those from his longstanding tenure with ECM Records, they do deserve to be heard and debated once more in the 21st century as truly compelling, even groundbreaking works of the period. In fact, while Lloyd wasn’t the first jazz musician to play Bill Graham’s Fillmore Auditorium (John Handy was), he was the first jazzman to connect with the record-buying rock audiences of the late ’60s without embracing rock music as a form (some of that came later during his Blue Thumb period). This double-disc anthology from Rhino UK does an excellent job of presenting to the listener a very solid, consistent overview of the years when Lloyd’s quartet were making their mark; they became near rock stars with young people in the United States and Europe, and critical darlings of the jazz world simultaneously — something unheard of during that period. The albums Dream Weaver, Forest Flower, Charles Lloyd in Europe, The Flowering, Love-In, Journey Within, Soundtrack, and Charles Lloyd in the Soviet Union are all represented here. They are equally divided between live and studio offerings. Lloyd’s quartet remained all but constant during this period as well. His young pianist Keith Jarrett and drummer Jack DeJohnette, feature on every recording here; bassist Ron McClure was replaced by Cecil McBee for the later recordings — the two groups are divided by disc on this set. These recordings, whether they be older Lloyd originals such as “Forest Flower,” (that dated back to his days with Chico Hamilton’s group) or newer compositions, such as the very first recorded version of Jarrett’s “Sorcery,” are played with enthusiasm, fire, gentility, and a keen sense of the emerging Eastern modalities in Lloyd’s sound; these would remain with him throughout his career, and have been explored most recently with his group Tangam. The only problem with this compilation is that it isn’t complete, but it is a solid tease for picking up all of the Atlantic sides because literally all are worthy of owning. The sound is 24-bit remastered and there is an excellent historical essay in the liners by Jazzwise editor Jon Newey. – Thom Jurek

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