Maria Muldaur - One Hour Mama: The Blues of Victoria Spivey (2025) [Hi-Res]

  • 11 Jul, 12:54
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Artist:
Title: One Hour Mama: The Blues of Victoria Spivey
Year Of Release: 2025
Label: Nola Blue Records
Genre: Blues, Folk, Dixieland, Americana
Quality: Mp3 320 kbps / FLAC (tracks) / 24bit-44.1/88.2/96kHz FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 40:04
Total Size: 96.7 / 197 / 585 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

1. My Handy Man (3:59)
2. What Makes You Act Like That? (3:23)
3. Don't Love No Married Man (3:52)
4. Dreaming of You (2:45)
5. Organ Grinder Blues (4:03)
6. No, Papa, No! (3:15)
7. One Hour Mama (3:06)
8. Funny Feathers (3:19)
9. Gotta Have What It Takes (3:09)
10. Any-Kind-a-Man (2:46)
11. Down Hill Pull (3:22)
12. T-B Blues (3:10)

Best known world-wide for her 1973 pop mega-hit "Midnight at the Oasis," which received 2 GRAMMY nominations, Muldaur's 62 year career could best be described as a long and adventurous odyssey through the various forms of American Roots Music. In Sept. 2019, The Americana Music Association awarded her "The Lifetime Achievement Americana Trailblazer Award" for her lifelong work of covering the depth and breadth of American Roots music.

Muldaur has recorded 43 solo albums covering all kinds of American Roots Music. In recent years, often joining forces with some of the top names in the business, she has recorded and produced at least a dozen Blues albums, garnering 4 GRAMMY nominations and various Blues awards.

Of this "bucket list" project honoring her mentor, Victoria Spivey, Muldaur says: "A few years ago someone sent this review of my performance at the '64 Newport Folk Festival. It just blew my mind, as I never knew till that moment that she had written it! It was like she reached down from Blues Heaven to bestow her approval and encouragement once again to this blues disciple!"

"Never judge a book from its cover and when a person is meek and humble don't judge them unless you know what you're doing. Some months ago I met a little girl of this type. She never had much to say. She was with a certain revival jug band at that time. I studied her voice,her looks and her personality very well. I can tell you that I found nothing but success for this little lady. I called her aside and told her to go for herself and to find a spot in which she could show off her talents instead of being in the background." -- Victoria Spivey, after viewing Maria Muldaur's first appearance at the 1964 Newport Folk Festival with the Kweskin Jug Band