Marissa Mulder
Shelter from the Storm
Metropolitan Room, NYC, July 20, 2017
Reviewed by Peter Haas for Cabaret Scenes
It seemed an unlikely combination: Marissa Mulder singing the songs of Bob Dylan. Mulder: tall, red-headed, with a lovely soprano voice enhanced by a warm, winning personality.
Dylan: once a rumpled chronicler of social unrest, now an elder statesman of folk song and winner, last year, of a Nobel Prize in Literature for “having created new poetic expressions within the great American song tradition.”
Yet Mulder chose this musical adventure—and it worked beautifully. The show: Shelter from the Storm, a mini-parade of Dylan’s better-known output, performed with sweet simplicity and quiet passion as she added to Dylan’s songs with her own appealing style and sparkle. Backed by only two musicians—Mike Rosengarten, creator of the evening’s musical arrangements and performing on guitar and harmonica, and Mike Lunoe on assorted percussion—the singer held her audience riveted to center stage.
The songs were classic Dylan. They included “The Times,They Are A-Changin’’’; ”Shelter from the Storm”; a moving rendition of “Don’t Think Twice, It’s Alright”; ”Mr. Tambourine Man”; and a spirited take on “I’ll Be Your Baby Tonight,” the last including a kazoo break by Rosengarten.
Other numbers included “Masters of War,” with its undercurrent of Dylan’s rage at international conflict; “A Hard Rain’s Gonna Fall,” with guitar and kazoo accompaniment; “Like a Rolling Stone,” which Dylan had performed as he first moved from using an acoustic guitar to playing an electric one; “Tomorrow Is a Long Time,” a lesser-known love song; and “My Back Pages.”
Along the way, Mulder interrupted the music to offer a brief background on Dylan’s career, telling of his early move from his native Minnesota to New York’s Greenwich Village folk music scene and his rising popularity. Then it was back to music as she completed the show with “Forever Young” and—of course—“Blowin’ in the Wind,” with the audience joining in.
This show played to a sparse summertime house; it deserves a new, longer run and a wider audience.