Maria Muldaur
'Naughty, Bawdy & Blue'
Stony Plain SPCD 1319 (May 2007 release)
Maria Muldaur - still remembered for her classic hit Midnight at the Oasis - has become one of Stony Plain's most treasured artists.
"Naughty Bawdy and Blue" is the third in a series of CDs of classic blues material from the '20s through to the '40s. This time however Maria changes her focus from country blues to the vaudeville blues artists who recorded racy, entertaining blues, usually backed by the best jazz players of the day. Maria sings and delivers this material better then anyone.
Both previous Stony Plain CDs, Richland Woman Blues (2001) and Sweet Lovin' Ol' Soul (2005) were nominated for Grammy Awards.
This album recreates the songs associated with the classic black singers of the '20s who were major pop stars in their day - among them Bessie Smith, Victoria Spivey, Sara Martin, Ethel Waters, Sippie Wallace and Mamie Smith, the first female blues artist to be recorded, who sold more than 2 million copies of her first hit "Crazy Blues."
These songs are tough, funny, independent and - as Maria explains - were recorded by women "liberated socially, financially and most of all sexually from the confines and mores of the time." Maria is accompanied throughout by pianist James Dapogny's seven-piece Chicago Jazz Band.
Bonnie Raitt makes a special guest appearance on "Separation Blues, a tune written by Sippie Wallace, with whom Bonnie toured in the '80s. Both Bonnie and Maria sang the song with Sippie Wallace prior to her death in 1988.