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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
14 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
*In The Beginning There Was......Jug- Songstress Maria Muldaur Goes Back Home,
By
This review is from: Garden of Joy (Audio CD)
The last time that I featured the femme fatale blues torch singer reincarnate Maria Muldaur (at least that is the way that she, successfully, projected herself in her recent blues revival projects) was in a review of her 2007 CD tribute to the great singers of the 1920s and 1930s, Bessie Smith, Memphis Minnie, Sippy Wallace and the like. I might add that I raved on and on about the value of her project, the worthiness of the singers honored and her own place in the blues pantheon. Of course, for those in the know about the roots of the folk revival of the 1960s at least, the name Maria Muldaur is forever associated with another closely-related branch of roots music-the jug band. Maria was the very fetching female vocalist for the old time revivalist Jim Kweskin Jug Band (and an earlier effort in her home town, New York City, by John Sebastian of The Lovin' Spoonful fame, The Even Dozen Jug Band).
Well, hold the presses please, because the red hot blues mama has come back home in her latest project, the CD under review, "Maria Muldaur And Her Garden Of Joy". And if Maria was kind of thrown in the background somewhat in those days by the strong presence of Jim Kweskin and that of her ex-husband Geoff Muldaur she is front and center on this effort. One of the virtues of jug music back in the day was that it was basically zany, funny, send-off kind of music and full of, usually, high-spirited if coded sexual innuendos. This, on occasion, was a welcome break from the heavy political message songs that were de rigueur or the traditional ballads filled with tales of thwarted love, duplicity and murder and mayhem. In this CD Maria brings back the energy and just plain wistfulness of that type of music. And she does it on her terms. As fate would have it, or rather by a conscious act, I happened to see Maria and her very fine new jug band made up of younger, well, Jim Kweskin jug band-types (along with guest performer, now blues/ragtime guitar virtuoso John Sebastian) in Cambridge (one of her old stomping rounds and an important secondary center of the folk revival in the 1960s). And, like the last time I saw her a couple of years ago when she was that femme fatale blues singer, she did not disappoint. The woman carried the show with the energy of the old days (that you can get an idea of by going on "YouTube" in a click from 1966). The line between jug music and flat out torch blues sometimes is not that wide and the switch over thus is not that dramatic. At least in Maria's hands. Witness her version of Mississippi John Hurt's "Richland Woman" which she did jug-style at the concert (she did a more lowdown bluesy version on her "Richland Woman" album). The example on this album that comes to mind is the little known but, currently, very relevant 1929 song "Bank Failure Blues". Also the classic jug tune "Garden Of Joy" and another one "Sweet Lovin' Ol' Soul" (also done blues-style on a previous album of the same name). This is good stuff but begs the question. Jim Kweskin is still performing. Geoff Muldaur is still performing. Geoff and Jim occasionally perform together. Wouldn't it be a treat if...?
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Let Me Be Your Teddy,
By Lee Armstrong (Winterville, NC United States) - See all my reviews (TOP 1000 REVIEWER) (HALL OF FAME REVIEWER) (VINE VOICE) (REAL NAME)
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This review is from: Garden of Joy (Audio CD)
Maria's new set is a complete delight. She bobs and scoobydoos all over the place with John Sebastian on guitar, David Grisman on mandolin & Taj Mahal on banjo & guitar. The opener "The Diplomat" penned by Dan Hicks has a great bell percussion and Maria's tongue-in-cheek vocals, "A man stepped on my toe and I say, 'Oh pardon me!'" "There's a creepy melody like a fiend keeps haunting me, all night long it rambles on through my brain, and I'm near insane," Maria sings on the Dixieland-flavored "The Ghost of St. Louis Blues." "Sweet Lovin' Ol' Soul" has a Taj Mahal flavor with its lazy swampy shuffle, "Let me be your teddy till your big bear comes; but don't you tell your big bear what your little old teddy has done." "He Calls That Religion" (but I know he's going to hell when he dies) has stinging irony for errant clergy and will put a smile on your face. "Good Time Music for Hard Times" is aptly titled and will put a smile on your face despite your troubles. Enjoy!
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Must Have...,
By
This review is from: Garden of Joy (Audio CD)
I endorse all comments to date. However, for me there is one song in particular ("The Ghost of The St. Louis Blues") that makes the CD worth every penny. Reminds me of the St. Louis Blues from the old "NBC Chamber Music Society of Lower Basin Street" collection. It is a hoot to play them back to back. Also the artwork on the CD almost makes one wish for the old days of LP covers...
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