After 60 years in the business, Brian Auger, keyboardist, composer, ferocious Hammond organ player and commander of the Oblivion Express, seems to finally be getting his flowers. This is in part due to the gradual reissuing of his vast back catalogue by his friend, manager and Soul Bank label boss Greg Boraman over the past few years.
“His amazing body of work has never had a higher profile, and all manner of superfans have voiced their love for his music,” Boraman tells me. “From Elton John and Andy Summers of The Police to younger artists like hip-hop giant 9th Wonder, Emma-Jean Thackray and Rebecca Vasmant.”
It’s not that music fans or fellow artists were unaware of Auger’s music, more that he has been so prolific as to be somewhat taken for granted, his name credited on countless releases as a contributor and bandleader. The more I know about Brian Auger the more he appears as a nexus that the 60s and 70s swirled around. Despite knowing him well, Boraman continues to be amazed by the far-out anecdotes Auger will occasionally casually reveal.
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“While I’ve known Brian for over 30 years, he’s still letting slip some incredible stories I’d never heard before,” Boraman says. “A good example is a recent revelation about how Judy Garland asked him and his jazz trio to play at her private party. She even tried to convince the head of EMI to sign him. He just casually slipped that into a conversation, and it stopped me in my tracks.”
Brian Auger’s career has been punctuated liberally with remarkable moments like these. “He’s got many more examples of similar tales,” Boraman continues, “involving Billie Holiday, US president Jimmy Carter, Jimi Hendrix, Tom Jones, The Beatles, Dizzy Gillespie, Spike Milligan, Albert Finney, from Sarah Vaughan to The Monkees, and that’s what makes his life an utterly original story that needs telling.”