Over two CDs, these recordings of
Charles Lloyd and his longtime collaborator and friend, the late
Billy Higgins, offer perhaps an even more fitting epitaph for the great drummer than the previously issued
Water Is Wide and companion album
Hyperion With Higgins, both with the
Lloyd sextet. These sides were recorded just five months before
Higgins' death. The music is divided into eight suites, and the two men pulled every trick out of the kit bag for these sessions.
Lloyd mans his usual array of saxophones and flutes as well as sings and plays taragato, Tibetan oboe, and piano.
Higgins, on the other hand, in addition to his ever-dancing style of drumming, plays blues guitar, guimbri, various hand drums, and the Syrian one-string lute. The combinations are intimate yet the music is sprawling in its reach. Whether in duet or in the various solos included -- notable is "All This Is That: Blues Tinge," on which
Higgins plays a stellar Delta blues on acoustic guitar and sings -- the notion that there are no boundaries and no time, that everything must get onto tape, is the pervasive m.o. Here are two men who know each other so well that the anticipation of utterance comes from the least likely sources. Egos have no place here, and neither does didactic discussion. Here, notions of song, tonality, sonorous expression, and spirituality are the guidelines for trying to get to feelings, nuances, and individual places that they've not traveled before. They succeed in spades. Despite its smallness and the quiet spirit that weaves these pieces together, there is crackling energy, humor, warmth, and a complete commitment to expressing what may indeed be beyond real expression. Not since
John Coltrane and
Rashied Ali's
Interstellar Space -- though they sound nothing alike -- has there been a duet recording of such unfettered communication. Highly recommended. ~ Thom Jurek