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Tag Archives: Maria Muldaur

Dan Hicks

Throughout his decades-long career, Dan Hicks stood as you of contemporary music’s true eccentrics. While steeped in folk, his acoustic audio understood few musical limitations. He drew on nation, call-and-response vocals, jazz phrasing, no little bit of humor to make a distinct, albeit sporadic, body of function that gained him …

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Robin Rogers

Guitarist, vocalist, and harmonica ace Robin Rogers’ existence was filled with hard knocks and sad converts, plus a couple of delightful coincidences, and she earned the proper to sing the blues the difficult, old-fashioned method, but sadly, she lived for just a short while after gaining her widest identification as …

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Ronee Blakley

Ronee Blakley was a folky singer/songwriter who found out critical acclaim with her self-titled 1972 debut. Using the compliment of such luminaries as Bob Dylan, Blakley was cast in the 1975 Robert Altman film Nashville as Barbara Jean, a victimized and eventually doomed vocalist. While a follow-up LP that same …

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Wendy Waldman

Wendy Waldman emerged in the same LA picture as Karla Bonoff, Andrew Silver, Linda Ronstadt, and J.D. Souther. She initial recorded within the group Bryndle (with Bonoff, Silver, and Kenny Edwards), so when they disbanded in the first ’70s with only 1 unreleased album with their name, she was agreed …

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Lenore

Lenore Elaine, a Canadian local, grew up in Interface Arthur, then moved to Toronto where she worked being a workers supervisor until she made a decision to drop from the paid labor force to stay house and raise a family group. At that time, she prepared to eventually turn into …

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The Chenille Sisters

The Chenille Sisters’ quirky appeal truly reaches across all ages — while their irreverent country-folk sound was originally geared to adults, they also have recorded several albums designed for children. Shaped in 1985 in Ann Arbor, Michigan, the Chenille Sisters are made up of Cheryl Dawdy, Connie Huber, and Sophistication …

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Sky Farmer

Formed from the disbanded ’60s strap Hill Bus, Sky Farmer strike the Chicago blues scene and started a streak of live performances in the region. Giving free-form jams, regional favorites, and the casual psychedelic guitar break down, the band obtained a large following in the region, and finally released Amazing …

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George Melly

The larger-than-life singer George Melly was probably the most beloved and notorious exponent of Britain’s postwar trad jazz renaissance. A well known memoirist, artwork critic, and bon vivant, his appetites for sex and alcoholic beverages had been the stuff of story, and his sobriquet “the Oscar Wilde of British jazz” …

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Linda Tillery

Before learning to be a prominent number in women’s music within the 1990s, SAN FRANCISCO BAY AREA native Linda Tillery began her singing career in the 1960s using the gender-integrated psychedelic/soul band the Launching Zone, that was modeled relatively after Sly as well as the Family members Rock. After two …

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The Oxfords

Of all bands over the surprisingly fertile ’60s rock and roll picture of Louisville, KY, the Oxfords were perhaps one of the most musically talented, and the first ever to undertake the British Invasion with both barrels, both in audio and image. Though it isn’t quite as noticeable in the …

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