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Steady Love
Steady Love

Steady Love in Bloomington, MN

Current price: $16.99
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The sounds of New Orleans have always been in
Maria Muldaur
's blood and catalog.
Dr. John
appeared on her first solo album back in 1974 and she arguably hit a career high point on her first full-fledged love letter to the city, 1992's
Louisiana Love Call
. She returns to the Crescent City for this 2011 release, employing veteran New Orleans keyboardist
Dave Torkanowsky
as musical director and "facilitator" and returning to the swampy "Bluesiana music" sound that includes heavy doses of gospel and blues along with touches of jazz, soul, and funk. This is a major shift from her past two acoustic jug band releases and plays to her sultry strengths as a vocalist who can convincingly sing any style of music she feels passionate about.
Muldaur
revisits a few tracks she has previously recorded (an earlier version of "As an Eagle Stirreth in Her Nest" was included on 1976's
Sweet Harmony
) but with a band that features guitarist
Shane Theriot
and
Subdudes
bassist
Johnny Allen
, they and the rest of the handpicked material boil with fresh enthusiasm. The hourlong, 13-track disc finds the singer interpreting some signature songs from the history of New Orleans and other gems such as
Sugar Pie DeSanto
's frisky
Chess
nugget "Soulful Dress" and a slow, stunning version of
Percy Mayfield
's "Send Me Someone to Love," the latter being the only song here not cut in New Orleans.
's voice has grown huskier over the years, all the better to dig into the gospel tunes that ground this set. Female backing singers including her daughter
Jenni
on harmonies help bring the religion on "I Done Made It Up in My Mind." The closing "I Am Not Alone" features its writer,
Rick Vito
, on slide guitar and strips down the sound, allowing
to hum and croon her spiritual convictions atop a snakelike churchy groove. She's just as convincing on a jumpy cover of
Elvin Bishop
's "I'll Be Glad" and the funk of
Bobby Charles
' classic "Why Are People Like That?," leaving room for the musicians to do their thing without hogging the spotlight. It's that indescribable vibe, perhaps aided by recording in New Orleans, that provides this album with its continuity and consistency. Add a batch of terrific tunes from somewhat unexpected sources (Austin's
Stephen Bruton
and two from
Greg Brown
) and a sympathetic mix from another area veteran in
John Porter
, and the result is a late-career stunner for an Americana singer who has never disappointed her fans despite, or perhaps because of, her diverse musical palette. That eclecticism works best within a context, though, which makes this return to New Orleans another high-water mark in
's impressive career. ~ Hal Horowitz
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