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Guitar maven Mary Flower has produced an ideal album for appreciation on a hot summer
Sunday afternoon on the back porch, or in the living room with a glass of wine at 1 AM
after a long day. It won’t make you get up and dance, but it sure will make you smile.
Flower, now a denizen of Portland, OR, presents 14 tunes, 6 of which she wrote. Mellow
and proficient are the appropriate adjectives for this tasteful potpourri...as well as
eclectic! How many other blues albums do you know that feature an array of instruments
such as tuba (well, yes, used by both Taj Mahal and Bonnie Raitt), banjo, mandolin,
accordion, saxophone, clarinet, and the usual suspects bass, drums, and piano? Although
it skirts and samples the folk, jazz, spiritual, and country genres, this is indeed still
a blues album. Homage is paid explicitly to Big Bill Broonzy, whose “Big Bill Blues” is
a highlight of the CD, and also implicitly to Reverend Gary Davis and such eminent followers
of his as Jorma Kaukonen and Stefan Grossman.
Of the 14 songs, 6 are instrumentals, including “Columbia River Rag,” Flower’s only solo.
All the other songs feature Flower collaborating beautifully with her guests. Especially
praiseworthy are her duets with pianist Janice Scroggins on “When I Get Home I’m Gonna Be
Satisfied” and “On Revival Day/There’s Going to Be the Devil to Pay.” On “The Ghost of the
St. Louis Blues” the horns lend a smoky 1920s nightclub ambience, and the classic Hoagy
Carmichael ballad “Up a Lazy River” sports a fiddle accompaniment that would have made
Stephane Grappelli happy. “Temptation Rag” is a tour de force that builds from stately to
lilting and lively. “Portland Town” touts the virtues of that Pacific Northwest haven despite
its proclivity to precipitation.
Throughout, Flower tickles, strokes, and caresses the strings impressively on acoustic,
bottleneck, and lap steel guitar. Her playing respects the songs and her fellow musicians,
and never overwhelms. Her vocals are not powerfully emotional, but fit well with the tunes.
[This review originally appeared on the BluesWax website.]
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