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It's a shame they are overshadowed in the mainstream (as well as sometimes considered a gimmick act), but by the same token, there's something special in owning one of their albums. No need to be a snob about it, though, because there's also a quiet dignity to the history the group has lived: segregation, the civil rights movement, rock and roll, consumer indifference, hip-hop, and so on.
Now the Blind Boys are on a world tour promoting their new album, Down in New Orleans. Joining them for the Miami stop is Mavis Staples, whose powerful voice grew in the Sixties with her family act, the Staples Singers. Trained by her father, Roebuck "Pops" Staples, Mavis brings a feminine angle to the genre, as well as more than 40 years' worth of material.