Geoff Muldaur

Geoff Muldaur
  • Geoff Muldaur

โ€œThere are only three white blues singers,โ€ said Richard Thompson. โ€œGeoff Muldaur is at least two of them.โ€

Muldaur is one of the most important figures of the American folk revival of the 1960s. Itโ€™s no exaggeration to say he was as much a force in the early days of that era as Bob Dylan, Joan Baez, Phil Ochs, or anyone else to spin a tune and pass the basket in the coffeehouses of Greenwich Village or Cambridge. And tomorrow night heโ€™ll be doing just thatโ€”well, probably not passing the basketโ€”in Rosendale, New York, when he visits the Rosendale Cafe.

Muldaur initially rose to prominence with the highly influential Jim Kweskin Jug Band, which also featured his then wife, singer Maria Muldaur. He went on to play with Paul Butterfield, Bonnie Raitt, Eric Von Schmidt, Jerry Garcia, and many others. He dropped out of site in the 1980s to concentrate on film and TV scoring (his โ€œBrazilโ€ was used in Terry Gilliamโ€™s movie of the same name), but has since re-emerged as a touring artist and a frequent guest on Garrison Keillorโ€™s NPR program โ€œA Prairie Home Companion.โ€

Here he is playing โ€œWild Ox Moanโ€:


Geoff Muldaur will perform at the Rosendale Cafe on April 25 at 8pm. Tickets are $20. For information, call (845) 658-9048 or visit http://www.rosendalecafe.com/.

Peter Aaron is the arts editor for Chronogram.

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