Saxophonist 
Charles Lloyd has been working with guitarists periodically since the 1950s: 
Calvin Newborn, 
Gabor Szabo, 
John Abercrombie, and others have played in his bands. On 
I Long to See You, he (with his stellar rhythm section -- bassist 
Reuben Rogers and drummer 
Eric Harland) renews that relationship with two gifted players: 
Bill Frisell and 
Greg Leisz (the latter on lap and pedal steel). This program yields folk and spiritual songs, re-recordings of 
Lloyd's own tunes, a pop nugget, and a new original. In what feels like the input from the label, there are two guest vocal appearances to boot: 
Willie Nelson beautifully delivers 
Ed McCurdy's antiwar classic "Last Night I Had the Strangest Dream," and 
Norah Jones offers a slow, dreamy reading of "You Are So Beautiful." 
I Long to See You feels more like a collaboration between 
Lloyd and 
Frisell than a leader date, which is sometimes problematic: these men can be overly deferential to one another. The album starts promisingly with a brooding read of 
Bob Dylan's "Masters of War" that threatens to explode at any moment. 
Frisell and 
Leisz (who have worked together a lot) take it through deep winding blues, building tension before 
Lloyd enters and carries it toward the outside before returning to blues, while 
Harland's circular drumming becomes somberly hypnotic. 
Lloyd plays flute on "Of Course, of Course" (originally recorded for an album of the same name for Columbia in 1964). Like its predecessor, it's tough, swinging post-bop with colorful slide guitar work and rim-shot syncopations. "La Llorona," from 
Lloyd's 
ECM years, is a standout: it captures his open, mournful, Spanish-tinged wail, fleshed out by elegant, timbral guitars, a sad bassline, and 
Harland's magical timekeeping. "Shenandoah" (which 
Frisell has recorded before), "All My Trials," and "Abide with Me" are all melodically attractive, but they lack the undercurrent of passion 
Lloyd has imbued traditional material with in the past. He and 
Frisell appear so seduced by their melodies, they treat them as fragile objects, not songs whose meanings need to be further explored. 
Frisell's speculative solo intro on "Sombrero Sam" is overly long; 
Lloyd's rhythmic sweeping flute doesn't enter until five minutes in, and slips out too quickly. The lone new tune, "Barche Lamsel," more than compensates. Over 16 minutes in length, it's easily the most exploratory thing here. It commences slowly but starts cooking five minutes in. 
Lloyd and the rhythm section are at their modal improvisational best, moving through folk, funk, blues, Eastern modes, and post-bop. 
Frisell and 
Leisz lend fine solos as well as layered textural and atmospheric support. The tune is a journey that ends in a question mark. 
I Long to See You is well worth investigating even if, at times, it is overly tentative. ~ Thom Jurek