Search - Flora Molton :: I Want to Be Ready to Hear God When He Calls

I Want to Be Ready to Hear God When He Calls
Flora Molton
I Want to Be Ready to Hear God When He Calls
Genre: Blues
 
  •  Track Listings (9) - Disc #1

For over four decades the remarkable Flora Molton has served her Nation's Capital as both musician and composer. With her slide guitar and gospel repertoire she has continued a tradition of sidewalk serenading, or busking,...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Flora Molton
Title: I Want to Be Ready to Hear God When He Calls
Members Wishing: 1
Total Copies: 0
Label: Patuxent Music
Release Date: 12/22/2014
Genre: Blues
Style: Acoustic Blues
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 660498025727

Synopsis

Product Description
For over four decades the remarkable Flora Molton has served her Nation's Capital as both musician and composer. With her slide guitar and gospel repertoire she has continued a tradition of sidewalk serenading, or busking, if you like, which extends back to the dawn of urban civilization. As a child growing up in rural Louisa County, Virginia, she was exposed to the reels and set dance tunes of her elders as well as the newer blues of Bessie Smith, Blind Lemon Jefferson, and Sara Martin (her favorite) from phonograph records. Some of the earliest tunes she remembers are a version of "Wasn't it Sad When That Great Ship Went Down," learned on a neighbor's accordion, W.C. Handy's early "Hesitation Blues," and a dimly remembered "Atlanta Blues," learned on a parlor organ. Ms. Molton's father was a Baptist minister who supported his family by farming, an activity which experienced a depression several years before Wall Street crashed in '29. To supplement his income, he began spending his winters mining coal, moving to the company town of New Hall, West Virginia during the winters, where his family eventually joined him. A brother eventually adopted his father's profession, taking young Flora to Berryville, Virginia in the mid -thirties and to Washington in 1937, when he became minister of the Florida Avenue Baptist Church. It was here that a man showed her how to tune her guitar in Vastopol (open D) and her own musicianship took care of the rest. In the mid-sixties she became an integral part of Washington's emerging folk blues community, joining John Jackson, Archie Edwards, Phil Wiggins, John Cephas and Big Chief Ellis in a successful effort to keep traditional blues and gospel song alive and well. Another member of this establishment was the late Ed Morris who served as musician, impresario, and unflagging supporter for Ms. Molton and her friends. In recent years Eleanor Ellis has served as both companion and accompanist to Flora Molton, and her presence is an important part of this record. Ms. Molton says, "After Ed passed I didn't think I could find anybody else to play the music like he did, but God works in very mysterious ways. I met Eleanor and she could play that music. I believe it was Ed's wishes for us to play together. It has been much joy to me, and it keeps Ed's spirit alive. This album represents the several sides of Ms. Molton's musical life - her street ministry, her work with church groups, and her concert and festival performances, which include the Smithsonian Festival of American Folklife, the Library of Congress, numerous clubs, and a fondly remembered private concert for the Rolling Stones. The songs are her own compositions, or traditional gospel songs enhanced by new Molton arrangements. If you've never met this warm, engaging lady, this record will serve as introduction. If you have, then it will be a welcome souvenir. Either way, it's top drawer old-time black gospel music, as only Flora Molton knows how to perform it. --- Dick Spottswood (1987)