EPISODE · May 10, 2026 · 22 MIN
Forest Flower and Charles Lloyd
from The Jazz Real Book · host Jay Sweet
“Forest Flower” and Charles Lloyd (133) “Forest Flower” stands as one of the defining jazz compositions of the 1960s and remains closely associated with Charles Lloyd and his groundbreaking quartet. Built around shifting modal harmony, alternating Latin and swing feels, and a floating melodic structure, the composition captures both sophistication and openness. Rather than relying on traditional bebop harmonic movement, the tune unfolds through colorful major seventh sonorities and spacious melodic phrasing, creating an atmospheric and almost spiritual quality. The famous live recording from the album Forest Flower: Charles Lloyd at Monterey became a rare jazz crossover success, reaching rock audiences and helping expand jazz visibility during the late 1960s.Lloyd’s performance balances lyricism with freedom, while the quartet featuring Keith Jarrett, Cecil McBee, and Jack DeJohnette demonstrates extraordinary collective interplay. Jarrett’s piano work is especially dynamic, and DeJohnette’s explosive rhythmic energy adds dramatic momentum. More than simply a jazz standard, “Forest Flower” represents a bridge between modern jazz, world influences, and the countercultural spirit of its era, helping establish Lloyd as one of jazz’s most spiritually expressive and enduring voices.Chico Hamilton Charles Lloyd The Jazz Real Book Podcast Playlist Vol.2
What this episode covers
“Forest Flower” and Charles Lloyd (133) “Forest Flower” stands as one of the defining jazz compositions of the 1960s and remains closely associated with Charles Lloyd and his groundbreaking quartet. Built around shifting modal harmony, alternating Latin and swing feels, and a floating melodic structure, the composition captures both sophistication and openness. Rather than relying on traditional bebop harmonic movement, the tune unfolds through colorful major seventh sonorities and spacious melodic phrasing, creating an atmospheric and almost spiritual quality. The famous live recording from the album Forest Flower: Charles Lloyd at Monterey became a rare jazz crossover success, reaching rock audiences and helping expand jazz visibility during the late 1960s.Lloyd’s performance balances lyricism with freedom, while the quartet featuring Keith Jarrett, Cecil McBee, and Jack DeJohnette demonstrates extraordinary collective interplay. Jarrett’s piano work is especially dynamic, and DeJohnette’s explosive rhythmic energy adds dramatic momentum. More than simply a jazz standard, “Forest Flower” represents a bridge between modern jazz, world influences, and the countercultural spirit of its era, helping establish Lloyd as one of jazz’s most spiritually expressive and enduring voices.Chico Hamilton Charles Lloyd The Jazz Real Book Podcast Playlist Vol.2
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Forest Flower and Charles Lloyd
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