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Allison Crowe's ’This Little Bird’ Ready to Fly

Advancing her quest to create music with the greatest integrity, Canada's Allison Crowe releases a new album, "This Little Bird", on October 9, 2006. "Soulful. Alive. Joyous. Grievous. Real, true, music is what I want to make, " she says. Eschewing all of the tricks and gimmicks that are today's standard, with this 12-song collection, recorded from Newfoundland to Vancouver Island, Crowe, again, succeeds. Testifying. Visceral. Adding titles of engineer and producer to her vocal, piano and guitar credits, Crowe is joined on most of the album's tracks by the rhythm section of Dave Baird (bass) and Laurent Boucher (percussion).

Nine new originals map emotional and spiritual territory with fresh sounds ~ encompassing the elegiac "Phoenix", gorgeous songs of love and hope, such as "Effortless" and "There Is", the jaunty dark humor of "Skeletons and Spirits", the redemptive grace of "Now" and "Phoenix", the raucous celebration of the title track, a joy of simplicity in "Circular Reasoning" - and "Silence", a song that stirs with romance.

Acclaimed not only as an exciting songwriter and live performer, but, also, as a song interpreter, for freshly definitive takes on Leonard Cohen (Hallelujah), Joni Mitchell (River), Counting Crows (A Murder of One) and others, Allison Crowe delivers a trio of remarkable covers on "This Little Bird". With this new album, the singer-songwriter from the islands gives her singular voice to "A Case of You" (Joni Mitchell's knowing paen to heart and homeland), "Darling Be Home Soon" (John Sebastian's lovely tune of longing) and "I Never Loved A Man The Way I Love You" (Ronnie Shannon's song best-known as Aretha Franklin's break-out tune in 1967).

When "Sister Re" began sessions at Alabama's Muscle Shoals Sound Studio, legend has it the future "Queen of Soul" told the assembled studio musicians: "Get your damn shoes on, you're getting someone who can really sing."

The same declaration can be made today of Allison Louise Crowe, iconoclastic and universal. Hers is one of the truly great voices of this, or any, age.

"This is no ProTool'd and AutoTuned plastic pop opus but a real musician creating a real performance", said UK music journalist Trevor Raggatt of Crowe's previous album release. Ross Hocker, long-time public broadcaster with NPR affiliate WGTE, whose musical taste embraces Thelonious Monk, Bela Bartok and Charles Gonoud, calls Allison Crowe's last American live performance "the most honest, heartfelt, and directly intimate concert in my entire life." Essentially, says Europe's premiere music journal, Record of the Day: "Allison Crowe has a voice to fall in love with."

Open the windows, turn up the volume, and sing along this October 9 with "This Little Bird". Visit allisoncrowe.com for more news and songs.



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