The worst thing about the Otmar Binder Trio's album Boogie Woogie Turnaround is that almost everything you are going to hear will sound very familiar. The best thing about the album is that almost everything will sound very familiar.
For many years now it is the rare musician that would have
even included a boogie woogie track on one of his albums, let alone let alone
devote an entire album to it. It is a
musical genre that smacks of the past.
In a world that focuses on the latest craze, the newest trends boogie is
about as old fashioned as grandma's rocking chair. New, however, doesn't necessarily mean good,
and old fashioned isn't necessarily bad.
The truth is, that when you listen to boogie woogie played with passion and
skill by musicians that honor the genre and its history, you have to wonder why
it has fallen from grace.
Boogie Woogie Turnaround may not mark the
beginning of a Renaissance, but it has enough fine music to get more than a few
listeners thinking a little boogie now and then could well spice up the jazz
scene. The seventeen tracks on the album although filled with licks that will bring
back memories to anyone who has ever listened to the likes of Pete Johnson and
Big Joe Turner are all new compositions written by pianist Binder himself or
along with a collaborator. That the songs sound like they could have been
written early in the last century is testimony to the authenticity of their
composer's vision.
Although the album is credited to the Binder Trio (Binder on
piano, Alexander Lackner, bass and Michael Strasser on drums) most of the
tracks feature additional instrumentalists. B.J. Cole plays pedal steel and
slide guitar on "Southbound," "Rising River Boogie" and
"Venice Stomp." He also plays on the bluesy "Brighton to Boston." Christian Dozzler
plays on five of the tracks including another blues, "Bluesprint" and
the evocative "Uphill." Both have that sweet antique vibe.
Gerry Schuller plays the B3 on "Changes to Be
Made," a tune straight out of the rock and roll tradition that the album
calls a bonus track."At Last," another bonus track which features
pianist Charlie Furthner is a much more traditional piano boogie played with
verve and power. The album ends with a whole additional orchestral ensemble
with strings and vocalists plus Cole's guitar playing a final Binder original,
"Floyd's Turn."
An Austrian, Binder
says he was introduced to boogie woogie in 1978 when his father brought home
the debut album of the Mojo Blues Band called Shake That
Boogie-Woogie. "As soon as the record-player's needle lifted up
at the end of the record," he says, "I started it back from the
beginning." He was eight years old at the time, and happily for us boogie
woogie became his passion, after all it could have been the 70s version of The
Wiggles. This is fun music. Binder understood that as a child, and as this
album shows, he hasn't forgotten it.
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