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When Peggy Lee died last year, the jazz world--and the entire music world--lost one of its greatest
balladeers and stylists. Simply put, when you hear Miss Peggy Lee's trademark hushed sensuality,
you immediately recognize that her voice could belong to no one else. Maria Muldaur, a steamy
chanteuse who made her name in blues and roots music in the ‘60s and ‘70s and then successfully
shifted to jazz in the ‘80s, has resurrected Lee's ethos for A Woman Alone... (Ms. Muldaur
discovered her own theme song, "I'm A Woman," on the B-side of Lee's "Fever&
quot; in a jukebox.)
Muldaur happily succeeds in taking both well-known and rare songs that Lee performed and
making them her own. Anyone who sings Lee's signature hit "Fever" must explore it
differently; indeed, Muldaur's direct, coy rendition is truly unique. From the jaunty and joyous
"Freedom Train" to the subtle and
reflective "Black Coffee," she evokes Lee's style
without ever imitating her. The stellar highlight of the recording is a carefully-nuanced reading of
"For Every Man There's A Woman," in which the singer projects an ethereal romantic
longing.
A rarity for a vocalist in that era, Lee was also an accomplished composer; the tunes she wrote
with her guitarist husband Dave Barbour slink along with melody and rhyme worthy of the best Tin
Pan Alley talents. (It seems odd that, as a self-proclaimed fan of 40 years, Ms. Muldaur was unaware
of Lee's work as a songwriter; she wrote dozens of hits and famously sued Disney for the improper
use of her Lady and the Tramp film score.) But Muldaur should be given
credit for not selecting these numbers instead of certain other tunes associated with Lee - "Big
Spender,"
"Is That All There Is?" - which may have been requested at concerts, but don't truly reflect
Lee as an artist. If Muldaur ultimately isn't as
distinctive as the legend she honors, she makes a strong case for the ongoing potency of Peggy
Lee's legacy.
This review originally appeared in
All About Jazz-New York June 2003.
~ Ed Felper
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Track Listing: 1. Fever (Cooley/Davenport) - 5:52
2. I Don't Know Enough About You (Barbour/Lee) - 3:52
3. Moments Like This (Lane/Loesser) - 4:04
4. Winter Weather (Shapiro) - 3:07
5. Some Cats Know (Leiber/Stoller) - 8:31
6. Everything Is Moving Too Fast (Barbour/Lee) - 3:10
7. Waitin' for the Train to Come In (Block/Skylar) - 3:29
8. The Freedom Train (Berlin) - 3:34
9. Black Coffee (Burke/Webster) - 6:32
10. A Woman Alone With the Blues (Robinson) - 3:17
11. For Every Man There's a Woman (Arlen/Robin) - 3:46
12. I'm Gonna Go Fishin' (Ellington/Lee) - 2:21
Personnel: David Torkanowsky - Piano
Maria Muldaur - Vocals
Danny Caron - Guitar
Dan Hicks - Vocals
Jeff Lewis - Trumpet
Kevin Porter - Trombone, Bass Trombone
Jim Rothermel - Clarinet, Flute, Alto and Tenor Sax
Arthur Latin - Drums
Neal Caine - Bass
Gerry Grosz - Vibraphone
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