Thursday, May 30, 2013

It Begins

Artist: Thunderboogie
Release Date: May 7, 2013
Label: Independent


"The journey from idea to reality."

Earlier this month, Thunderboogie let their second release, It Begins, loose. Clocking in a little over 20 minutes, each of the three tracks on It Begins displays a different aspect of what the group is capable of. Kicking the album off is "The Call" with an intense speech about risking our lives today for the future, traveling towards that time, and accepting the call. We then travel to a beautiful sanctuary while in-flight with "Quarky the Galaxy Bird." Then we safely land in the grooving grounds of "Geejam," the concluding track, that climbs musically through many different zones.

A neat aspect of this album is all you are hearing was, at one point, a live take. When recording these songs, Thunderboogie would play it from top to bottom without stopping to take the best cuts. Bassist Jake Downey said the fun in recording this was seeing "which jam told the best story for each of these songs." The chosen cuts for It Begins display these excellently. For a release with only 3 songs on it, you get more of a musical satisfaction then you would anticipate. You can partially thank the trumpet for that; it always adds such a distinct sound, especially when it is the only given horn in a group.

"The Call" opens It Begins. The 5 minute 26 second Middle Eastern influenced song simply drags you into this work. Justin DiLuiso, a long time friend of Downey delivers the thesis of It Begins altogether, compact into one eerie speech pushing the point that "for the future we must risk our lives. But when we get there, all shall be created." This song brings some of the most prominent funk on the album due to dominance of the rhythm section and the bass-in-your-face style of playing, a beautiful and recurring aspect of this album. When it boils down to horns, the given lines the trumpet delivers are a bit lackluster for the track. This, though, is due to the fact that in the recordings he is not nearly loud enough comparatively to the remainder of the band.

Do you ever find those songs that, even on the first listen, strike you in a certain place? A place very solemnly touched upon musically. For an indescribable reason, you feel an urge to give it another listen, and every time you do so there is a new feature flourishing in your ears. Personally, this is what I would have to describe "Quarky the Galaxy Bird" as. Every given aspect of the song delivers to its fullest potential. This beautiful tale tells us of Quarky and his journey from Earth to Outer Space. He begins this journey shortly after he realizes that he shouldn't fight the air with his wings, but that he must reach the height where he floats harmoniously like the clouds. Every time this beautiful ballad is played, the improvised segment of the song displays Quarky's journey from Earth.

Not long after we have begun this trip through music we escalate towards the finale, "Geejam." An (almost) instrumental that spends 9 minutes and 10 seconds on a musical journey that transitions from beautiful soaring dynamic areas, to the house of what seems to be a lesser experienced spawn of Page McConnell and Ray Manzarek with piano tickles galore, to a Jimi-influenced land where the four on the floor dance party the rhythm section is throwing gets coated by echoing guitar work and bulletproof trumpet accents. What better way to end a nice musical journey then with a beautiful vocal cadence repeating itself a couple times as the band slowly pulls the song to a halt?

Look at this album as a sandwich. There are a top and a bottom bun, and delicious contents in the middle. Without the essential buns, the structure that holds the sandwich together and makes it complete, it would be a mere single that had no conversational value. A bun-less burger. When all together though, you have the entirety of the meal, buns and all. The main focus of the sandwich may be on what is in the middle, yet it would not be nearly the same without the components that made it all one piece. That is how I look at It Begins. You can find serenity in "Quarky the Galaxy Bird," but that is not to say that "The Call" and "Geejam" aren't excellent pieces. They both collectively complete the work and make it what it is at this very moment.

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