Chicago Sun-Times

Charles Lloyd, Lucinda Williams join for a dazzling new album

- BY PABLO GORONDI

Renowned saxophonis­t Charles Lloyd and singer-songwriter Lucinda Williams bring the best of their musical worlds to “Vanished Gardens” (Blue Note), a dazzling blend of jazz tunes that glow like embers and Williams’ intricatel­y poetic songs.

Lloyd establishe­s a reflective mood on opening ballad “Defiant,” with Bill Frisell’s guitar and Greg Leisz’s pedal steel laying foundation­s for his tenor sax, along with the other two Marvels, drummer Eric Harland and bassist Reuben Rogers.

Frisell and Leisz each take a solo turn, but their playing often feels more like a duet. Near its conclusion, Lloyd returns front and center to add some more delicate melodies. The track’s nearly nine minutes coast by brilliantl­y.

Williams makes her entrance on the second song, “Dust.” Lloyd’s sax is anguished, and darkness is hovering: “You couldn’t cry if you wanted to / Even your thoughts are dust.”

Williams appears on five songs: three reinterpre­tations of tunes from her solo albums, one new song and a cover of Jimi Hendrix’s “Angel.”

“We’ve Come Too Far to Turn Around,” the new song, has a gospel mood of people demonstrat­ing resilience while facing a long series of mini apocalypse­s.

On “Unsuffer Me,” Williams’ aching call of “My joy is dead / I long for bliss” is answered by the band in a hypnotic, bluesy jam.

Among the instrument­als, Lloyd plays alto flute on the groovy “Blues for Langston and LaRue,” while Thelonious Monk’s meditative “Monk’s Mood” is a captivatin­g duet by Lloyd and Frisell.

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