Home » Jazz Articles » Album Review » Eivind Austad: That Feeling
Eivind Austad: That Feeling
ByEivind Austad
pianob.1973

Louis Armstrong
trumpet and vocals1901 - 1971
While the conceptual dealing with New Orleans jazz may seem a bit worn-out on the surface, a closer look at this specific gathering of forces reveals a joyous occasion of engaged musicianship and impressive craft. The date's success might have something to do with the experience and outstanding quality of Austad's collaborators in New Orleans locals
James Singleton
bass, acousticThroughout the album Austad puts a special emphasis on the melodiousness of his right-hand play and only adds minimal left-hand comping, in order to let Singleton's vibrant bass lines propel the trio on and drive its swing forward in a lively pulsating manner. The opener, "724 Blues," captures this notion aptly and lets Austad's virtuoso right-hand embellishments swirl and twirl to the expansive blues form in a nimble fashion, adequately supported by the pristine sonic transparency of the recording. A meditative quality accompanies "Esplanade Drive," another Austad-penned score, and gives the trio plenty of room for patient interplay and comfortable sonic elaborations, whereas the Charles Crozat Converse-penned hymn, "What a Friend We Have in Jesus," sees the band bring marching drums into gospel, before turning a tame shuffle into cozy swing.
Other standards on the record demonstrate how elegantly Vidachovic and Singleton are able to frame and then highlight Austad's sophisticated keystrokes. Calm and special humility define the trio's rendition of the
Spencer Williams
b.1889
Ornette Coleman
saxophone, alto1930 - 2015

George Harrison
guitar1943 - 2001
Track Listing
724 Blues; Soul of a Twain; Basin Street Blues; Turnaround; Esplanade Drive; Something; What a Friend We Have in Jesus; That Feeling.
Personnel
Album information
Title: That Feeling | Year Released: 2020 | Record Label: Losen Records
Tags
Comments
PREVIOUS / NEXT
Support All About Jazz
