Album Reviews

Jerry Douglas Band: What If

The Jerry Douglas Band
What If
(Rounder)
Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

If itโ€™s Dobro youโ€™re after, the first name that comes to anyoneโ€™s mind is Jerry Douglas. A master of the instrument (and lap steel) since he was a teenage prodigy, Douglas is the most versatile, eclectic, awarded (14 time Grammy winner) and well recorded Dobro player living and perhaps ever. Heโ€™s also the most musically inclusive, shifting from jazz to world music, blues, folk, country, rock, R&B, and of course bluegrass during a fascinating, profoundly wide-ranging 40 plus year career that has found him collaborating with a multitude of โ€œA listโ€ musicians from various genres including Emmylou Harris, Paul Simon and Derek Trucks.

But in a way, What If is a new beginning. Itโ€™s the debut from the appropriately named Jerry Douglas Band after a few dozen titles in partnership with others and solo. The expansive, seven piece unit includes a sax and trumpet horn section in addition to bass, drums, guitar, fiddle, obviously Douglasโ€™ Dobro and, perhaps unexpectedly, occasional vocals.

Not surprisingly, itโ€™s a freewheeling, musically sprawling set, perhaps more jazz and rock oriented than most would expect. Douglas writes most of the material yet works up innovative, substantially rearranged versions of โ€œHey Joe,โ€ best known by Hendrixโ€™s cover but here given a caffeinated backwoods workup, and Tom Waitsโ€™ โ€œ2:19.โ€ The albumโ€™s centerpiece is its title track, a pensive progressive jazz/bluegrass fusion instrumental that allows the members to stretch out and shows both their creativity and talent. Ditto for the Douglas-Bela Fleck co-write โ€œFreemantle,โ€ best described as bluegrass/jazz fusion, where Douglasโ€™ Dobro interweaves with the horns and guitar in electrifying fashion.

Thereโ€™s enough fret-shredding in the opening five minute โ€œCave Bopโ€ (a re-recording of a Douglas original, first heard in 2002) with its high energy soloing and near free-jazz approach, and the closing โ€œHot Country 84.5โ€ thatโ€™s somewhat more laid back but just as musically challenging, to satisfy those looking for Douglasโ€™ sizzling picking. But itโ€™s the interaction of the instruments throughout, in particular the horns, that makes this a true band production. More meditative material such as the Celtic-influenced โ€œButcher Boyโ€ and the lovely โ€œThe Last Wild Moorโ€ incorporate group members with restrained instrumental grandstanding. The contemplative โ€œGo Ahead and Leaveโ€ is a sweet showcase for Douglasโ€™ sedate side.

Whether you come for hot licks, compositional diversity or to experience a talented band firing on all cylinders with like-minded players delving into a variety of styles they love, the superb What If has you covered. Hopefully this is the start of a long term ensemble, willing to test individual musical parameters and expand their roots based standards into new, dynamic and fresh frontiers.