Jon Lloyd is a UK-based saxophonist and composer.

Jon Lloyd
Background information
BornStratford-on-Avon, England
GenresJazz, contemporary classical, Free jazz, free improvisation
Occupation(s)Musician, composer
Instrument(s)Saxophone
Years active1987–present
LabelsFMR, HatHut, Leo, 33 Jazz, Ubuntu Music
Websitejonlloydmusic.com

Biography edit

He was born in Stratford-on-Avon, Warwickshire, UK in 1958. He was educated at Warwick School and at Imperial College, London University, working for several years as a research scientist at London's Kings College Hospital before pursuing a career divided between music and teaching.

From the mid-1980s onwards Jon Lloyd lived and worked in London and was part of the London free improvisation scene of the time. He played free jazz with the Lloyd Fowler Garside Trio, curated club events and organised many improvisation projects, including "Anacrusis", a large-scale improvising ensemble featuring saxophonist Evan Parker.[1]

Through the nineties his quartet with John Law, bassist Paul Rogers (or Tim Wells) and drummer Mark Sanders released CDs on LEO Records (Syzygy, 1991; Head! 1993) and on the Swiss label HatART; (By Confusion, 1997).

High-profile performances by the quartet during this period included the 1993 Contemporary Music Network tour of the UK supporting the Bill Frisell Band, (QEH London concert broadcast on BBC R3) Berlin's FMP Festival in 1997 plus several Arts Council England tours.

In the late nineties, Lloyd extended his compositional approach, writing more tightly composed music for a sextet of improvising musicians, releasing "Praxis" on FMR records. This sextet included several names on the international free music scene of the time: violinist Aleksander Kolkowski, French trombonist Mark Boukouya, bassist John Edwards, American cellist Stan Adler and drummer Mark Sanders.

At the end of the nineties several new projects arose, notably "Jon Lloyd Four" (released on HatOLOGY in 1999) with drummer Paul Clarvis, cellist Stan Adler and Brazilian bassist Marcio Mattos, and in 2001 the release on HatOLOGY of "Abacus", John Law's suite for jazz quartet also comprising bassist Tim Wells and American drummer Gerry Hemingway. This album received the French "Choc" award of that year.[2][failed verification]

In the early part of the 2000s Lloyd explored contemporary classical composition. He wrote "String Quartet 1" (performed by Philipp Wachsmann, Stan Adler, Charlotte Glasson and Dylan Bates, Battersea Arts Centre, London) and "Form:Reform", a piece featuring flautist Rowland Sutherland (performed Russell-Cotes Museum, Bournemouth). Between 2001 and 2003, Jon was a shortlisted composer for the Society for the Promotion of New Music (SPNM) and had a piece broadcast on BBC Radio 3 ("Stasis"). The culmination of this period of composition was the recording "Still Life" (ASC Records) in 2003, a collection of reflective pieces written by Lloyd and performed by Lloyd on piano, Stan Adler on cello and Cathy Stevens, viola.
Returning to jazz-related performance in 2005, Jon worked again with John Law and in 2006 they released "Mimesis" (ASC Records), a suite of compositions (written by both musicians) for piano and soprano saxophone. This duo toured in the UK supported by Arts Council England.

In 2009, Jon Lloyd began to embrace European jazz-related compositional elements in his writing and playing. The Jon Lloyd Quintet toured widely in the UK and the 2013 release "Vanishing Points" (33Xtreme) with drummer Asaf Sirkis, bassist Tom Farmer, pianist John Law and guitarist Rob Palmer left free music behind and began to explore a much wider European sound.

2022 saw Jon involved with Renaissance. Conceived by composer and pianist John Law, this was a multi-media, ambient jazz work. Using samples of renaissance polyphonic choral work as a harmonic basis, Law composed extended pieces with an underlying electronic textural fabric (created in collaboration with Jasper Law) for saxophone and keyboard to improvise upon. The music was presented in major cathedrals around the UK, including Gloucester Cathedral, Durham Cathedral, Truro Cathedral, Beverley Minster and Christchurch Priory, accompanied by projected visuals by digital artist Patrick Dunn, touring vj artist for Tangerine Dream. The first performance at Malmesbury Abbey was released as "Live at Malmesbury Abbey" (2022) on 33 Jazz Records.

The 2023 Jon Lloyd Quartet is a new group presenting Jon's European Contemporary Jazz compositions, performed by Jon (tenor and soprano saxophone), John Law (piano), Nick Pini (bass) and Alex Goodyear (drums) at UK/European venues and festivals.[3] The Jon Lloyd Quartet recording "Earth Songs" is to be released by Ubuntu Music in February 2024.[4]

Selected discography edit

  • Syzygy (1990) (Jon Lloyd Quartet) LEO Records CDLR173
  • Head! (1993) (Jon Lloyd Quartet) LEO records CDLR186
  • By Confusion (1997) (Jon Lloyd Quartet) HatArt CD6198
  • Praxis (1998) (Jon Lloyd Sextet) FMR Records CD 47-VO198
  • Four and Five (1999) (Jon Lloyd Four) HatOLOGY CD537
  • Abacus (2001) (John Law Quartet) HatOLOGY CD567
  • Apparitions (2004) (Apparitions) LEO Records CDLR408
  • Mimesis (2006) (Law/ Lloyd Duo) ASC Records CD85
  • Still Life (2006) (Chamber Music) ASC Records CD87
  • Vanishing Points (2013) (Jon Lloyd Quintet) 33xtreme002
  • Brittle They Snap (2019) (Adler/ Lloyd Duo) Syzygy Records syzygy60
  • Live at Malmesbury Abbey (2022) (Renaissance) 33JAZZ Records 33Jazz289
  • Earth Songs (2024) (Jon Lloyd Quartet) Ubuntu Music UBU0162

References edit

  1. ^ "All Music Biography". AllMusic.
  2. ^ "Choc Award". French Jazz Magazine.
  3. ^ "Jon Lloyd at Swanage Festival". London Jazz News. 17 July 2023.
  4. ^ Ubuntu Press Release (4 December 2023). "Jon Lloyd signs to Ubuntu". Ubuntu Music.

External links edit