Marnix Busstra's Old School Band |
For those who love a good old
school band; a tight no-nonsense
grooving ensemble with funk-driven bass and drums, a wizard on keyboards and
an extraordinarily tasteful guitarist with his own signature sound, then go no
further than Dutch guitarist Marnix Busstra’s latest Old School Band. While the music is derivative the guitarist has managed to bring his own European flavor to this genre.
Busstra is an accomplished
musician who plays acoustic and electric guitar, Irish bouzouki and electric
sitar. He leads several bands including the heralded Mike Maineri/Busstra Marnix
quartet, a collaboration with the Steps Ahead vibraphonist that goes back to 2003.
His Old School Band includes longtime collaborator, bassist Norbert
Sollewijn Gelpke, the organist Eric Van De Bovenkamp and the drummer Mark
Stoop. The album features nine of Busstra’s compositions that are thoroughly
entertaining. The band plays with a deeply intuitive sense of unity. Busstra is the lead voice on a majority of the album and his floating, viscous style
weaves into the group voice without ever overpowering it. His guitar playing
somehow manages to walk a line between syncopation and flow, without ever
sacrificing either one.
On this album, Busstra gives a nod
to his early influences and gone back to the basics, the reliable,
often funky, jazz guitar/organ/bass/drums format. The group follows in the
footsteps of guitarist John Scofield’s outings with avant-jazz-funk, jam band Medeski,
Martin & Wood, popularized by their album from 1998 A Go Go.
The likeness is more homage than
imitation with Busstra’s guitar sounding like an amalgam of Scofield, Metheny and
Dire Straights’ guitarist Mark Knopfler to my ears. His music has an infectious
lilt to it that you can be swept up in. Take a listen to funky drum intro on
the opener “Medium Rare” and the bouncy melody that Busstra plucks out of his
electric guitar. Pure fun.
Or get down with the swelling
organ chops of Bovenkamp and the booming bottom of Gelpke’s bass on the funky “Ten
Euro Skunk,” one of my favorites, and you’ll get the idea. These guys are
having fun while digging a deep groove, and their precision is marvelous. If you don’t find yourself following the beat
with some part of your body than check your pulse.
On “No Solution,” a softly
swaying shuffle that is right in Busstra’s wheelhouse, we find the guitarist at
his most lyrical. His note choices are fluid and soulful. When he solos each
note almost bleeds into the following notes as if part of a rushing current. Gelpke’s
tasty bass solo is a welcome addition and Bovenkamp proves he is an accomplished accompanist
as he spins some magical sounds on his keyboard at the fading coda.
“Out of the In Crowd” is the composition
where Busstra’s guitar and band comes closest to the Scofield funk sound. Gelpke’s funky bass lines bringing it down
home as Bovenkamp delights with some of his most inspired gritty keyboard work on
the album. Drummer Stoop’s snare-heavy beat sprinkled with some creative fills carries
this rhythm with an assured panache.
The whole album is just plain fun
and If you’re like me, you be inspired to tap your feet and bop your head. “Little White Lie,” features some
adventurous serpentine guitar lines by Busstra with the band roiling behind him.
“Too Hot Tub” is a slow, exaggerated walking blues that allows Bovenkamp to use
some of his arsenal of sounds to great effect. Stoop’s is given an extended
drum solo that is just a wellspring of percussive creativity without ever being
unnecessarily bombastic.
“A Good Day” is another one of
those songs that gets stuck in your head. Stoop demonstrates he is up on some
of the most modern drum styles, varying his technique as the music demands. Busstra
features his rhythm section, particularly Bovenkamp, for a majority of this
song preferring to allow the music to establish and hold onto a groove. His
solo about two thirds through is sparse and tasteful.
The set ends with “New Canal of
the Emperors” an evocative composition that reminds me a bit of some of the music
of Dixie Dreggs’ keyboard player T. Lavitz and the jagged “F**king Speedbumps”
a raucous ride that funks you up and then leaves you hanging in mid-air when the
band shuts it down like turning off a light switch. Grab some Dutch funk for yourself.
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