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Jazz Articles about Maria Muldaur

4
Live Review

Maria Muldaur, Marcia Ball, Tracy Nelson and Del Ray at the Musical Instrument Museum

Read "Maria Muldaur, Marcia Ball, Tracy Nelson and Del Ray at the Musical Instrument Museum" reviewed by Patricia Myers


Maria Muldaur, Marcia Ball, Tracy Nelson and Del Ray Musical Instrument Museum “Saluting the Pioneers of Women Who Rock" Phoenix, Arizona October 16, 2013 Four women musicians performed a joyous tribute to Sister Rosetta Tharpe and Memphis Minnie, black pioneers in gospel and early blues styles that became the roots of rock 'n' roll. The 22-song concert format was a soul-satisfying mix of gospel, blues, boogie-woogie and swing. “Saluting the Pioneers" was ...

1
Album Review

Maria Muldaur: Heart of Mine - Love Songs of Bob Dylan -

Read "Heart of Mine - Love Songs of  Bob Dylan -" reviewed by AAJ Italy Staff


Smussa lo scanzonato andamento country di “I’ll Be Your Baby Tonight”, adorna timbricamente “Buckets of Rain” e “You’re Gonna Make Me Lonesome When You Go”, rende ancora più impossibile l’impossibile romanticismo di “Make You Feel My Love”: Maria D’Amato, in Muldaur, non poteva fare di meglio nel tributo al menestrello di Doluth. Dopo essere stata una delle testimonianze nel ritratto di Scorsese dedicato a Bob Dylan, No Direction Home, la cantante aveva a disposizione un immenso repertorio nel quale gettarsi ...

180
Album Review

Maria Muldaur: A Woman Alone With The Blues

Read "A Woman Alone With The Blues" reviewed by Ed Felper


When Peggy Lee died last year, the jazz world--and the entire music world--lost one of its greatest balladeers and stylists. Simply put, when you hear Miss Peggy Lee's trademark hushed sensuality, you immediately recognize that her voice could belong to no one else. Maria Muldaur, a steamy chanteuse who made her name in blues and roots music in the ‘60s and ‘70s and then successfully shifted to jazz in the ‘80s, has resurrected Lee's ethos for A Woman Alone... (Ms. ...

154
Album Review

Maria Muldaur: Music For Lovers

Read "Music For Lovers" reviewed by Ed Kopp


Maria Muldaur is blessed with a voice that's both supple and sassy. In fact, her singing seems to grow more soulful with each album. Muldaur has tackled a lot of genres during her 57 years--everything from jug band music to bluegrass to rock to jazz to gospel to children's music. Over the last decade or so, Muldaur has focused primarily on blues and rootsy pop. Always smart about her musical choices, she is particularly effective on sultry, seductive numbers like ...

176
Album Review

Maria Muldaur: Meet Me Where They Play The Blues

Read "Meet Me Where They Play The Blues" reviewed by Ed Kopp


Bob Dole ought to ditch the Viagra and buy Maria Muldaur's latest CD. Muldaur's new one is hotter than Tabasco sauce and a hell of a lot cheaper than those blue pills.Former pop songstress Muldaur has reconstituted herself as a blues singer while retaining the sexually charged persona that she created with the 1974 hit “Midnight at the Oasis." On Meet Me Where they Play the Blues, Muldaur tackles a subgenre that meshes perfectly with her silky voice ...


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