|
Artist: MARIA
MULDAUR
Title: MARIA MULDAUR LIVE IN CONCERT
Label: GLOBAL RECORDING ARTISTS
Release Date: AUGUST 2009
By DENNIS ROGER REED
Maria Muldaur has had a somewhat
schizophrenic career. Her early work was totally roots oriented, working with
the Jim Kweskin Jug Band, singing, playing fiddle and serving as a sort of folk
music sex symbol. But by far her biggest success was as a pop jazz chanteuse warbling
Midnight at the Oasis. To some, she's
the iconic hippy chick with the long thick hair, dancing to Bob Dylan at
Newport. To others, she is an almost Mae West-ian entertainer, as known for her
repartee and cleavage as her song selection. Midnight has become, like it or
not, a standard, at least judging by Wal-Mart and recent elevator
investigation.
The years have
been kind to Muldaur, and the seamless transition from nubile teen to "hot
mama" has occurred. I once heard a folk music radio show host back announce one
of Muldaur's songs with a reminiscence of seeing her perform at the Ash Grove
when he was just 14 years old. He waxed eloquent about her vocal abilities and
her fiddle playing. And he mentioned that she wore a very short miniskirt, and
there was a raised stage and he was in the very first row... and his reverie sort
of slipped into dead air time and then a recorded public service announcement.
Bonnie Raitt has made a few statements about Muldaur's ability to enthrall the
male of the species. Midnight At the
Oasis indeed.
Her voice is
somewhat of an acquired taste, sometimes rough and sexy in her lower register,
and airy and sometimes almost cartoony in her upper register. She is a master
at using her vocal instrument fully, doing whatever she can to cajole that last
bite to the lyric AND hit that high note at the end. She is a great interpreter
of songs. She is an excellent judge of material and more importantly, an
excellent judge of material that suits her own style. (Linda Rondstat would've
done well to run some of her choices by Maria for her opinion, and maybe we
would've been spared Willin' or Sail Away.) Muldaur makes songs her own.
Her arrangements may add elements of reggae, jazz, blues, country and pop, but
a Maria Muldaur song is a Maria Muldaur song, no matter who wrote it or
recorded it prior.
Much of her more
recent work harkens back a bit to that rootsy sound, with an emphasis on the
blues. Her 2006 Heart of Mine - Love
Songs of Bob Dylan interpreted some of Bob's lessen known jewels in
Muldaur's inimitable style. The production on Heart of Mine was fairly slick, with You Ain't Goin' Nowhere a welcome retreat into Maria's fiddle
playing and more grease in the skillet.
Muldaur took it on
the road, and recorded it live. The song list on Live In Concert leans heavily on Heart of Mine, even replicating the track listings from that
recording. Live In Concert features
some of Maria's between song chatter, and of course Midnight At the Oasis is obligatory. For reasons unknown, her
hearty live version of You Ain't Goin'
Nowhere is referred to by Muldaur as Ride
Me High, and is listed as such. It's the most rowdy, and arguably, most
enjoyable moments of the project.
Suzy Thompson
joins on fiddle, and Kimberly Bass provides background vocals. Muldaur's
crackerjack slick band consists of Chris Burns on keyboards; Craig Caffall on
guitar; Danny Caron on guitar; Paul J. Olguin on bass; David Tucker on drums;
and J. Jaffee on steel guitar and percussion.
If you're a huge
fan, you'll need to get this recording. It's more for the completist, unless
you loved Heart of Mine so much that
the thought of a live version makes you dizzy, then your day has been made.
Dennis Roger Reed is a singer-songwriter, musician and writer
based in San Clemente, CA. He's released two solo CDs, and appeared on two CDs
with the newgrassy Andy Rau Band and two CDs with the roots rockers Blue Mama.
His prose has appeared in a variety of publications such as the OC Weekly and
MOJO magazine. Writing about his music has appeared in an eclectic group of
publications such as Bass Player, Acoustic Musician, Dirty Linen, Blue Suede
News and Sing Out! His oddest folk resume entry would be the period of several
months in 2002 when he danced onstage as part of both Little Richard's and Paul
Simon's revues. He was actually asked to do the former and condoned by the
latter. He apparently knows no shame.
|