2 posts tagged “aretha franklin”
For a musician with talent and integrity these are the best of times.
Barriers between artist and audience that have existed for decades are now crumbled like the Berlin Wall. Allison Crowe is making the most of new freedoms. The much-loved singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist is reaching millions globally via the internet as well as live touring.
At home in Nanaimo, British Columbia and Corner Brook, Newfoundland, (spanning the breadth of Canada - from Atlantic to Pacific shores), Indiecan Radio host Joe Chisholm comments that Allison Crowe is the “most Canadian Canadian I’ve ever met.”
Last night, Canuck bard Leonard Cohen is inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. A legendary poet, writer, songwriter, and musician, Cohen is enjoying ever-broader public appreciation - his music reaching a mainstream audience last week on American Idol (when a contestant, Jason Castro, performed a shortened rendition of “Hallelujah”.)
At the same time, Allison Crowe’s most popular performance of Cohen’s glorious modern standard, “Hallelujah”, has an audience of over one million on YouTube - placing her version of the song in the top handful, and, as one of the most ‘favorited’ videos of all time in Canada - in the company of Aretha Franklin’s “I Say a Little Prayer”, Janis Joplin’s “Try” (live at Woodstock), Fleetwood Mac’s “Go Your Own Way”, Led Zeppelin’s “Over the Hills and Far Away”, and, among today’s acts, Michael Buble’s ‘official’ version of “Home”.
Known for singular interpretations of Cohen, Joni Mitchell, The Beatles and others, thanks also to cultural and techonological revolutions, Allison Crowe’s original songs, as well as finding their massive audience, are, themselves, being covered. A distinctive and vital songwriter, Crowe’s unique songbook finds her anthemic meditation on peace and war, “Whether I’m Wrong”, and her spiky kiss-off “Skeletons and Spirits”, being interpreted by such diverse performers as up-and-coming singer-songwriters in the Netherlands to a community choir in Valencia, California. “Disease”, a song of social commentary, is being contributed, in all its raging glory, to the cause of “Music Inspires Health”, an Atlanta, Georgia-based initiative that’s enlisted Crowe, alongside Dave Brubeck, Ari Hest and others, to address a range of health issues in a musical context.
During 2008, exciting live, Allison Crowe is slated to travel over 90,000 kilometres for concerts in her home-towns of Nanaimo and Corner Brook, as well as shows in New York City, Boston/Cambridge, Ottawa, Toronto, Vancouver, Paris, Liverpool, Vienna, Prague, and multiple dates in Scotland, Germany, Scandinavia and other locations.
This past weekend, Crowe joined a cavalcade of talent in White Rock, B.C. for a rocking celebration of the 20th Anniversary of Larry Anschell’s Turtle Recording Studios - an SPCA-fundraiser. Upcoming concert dates this month include: March 15 at the Heritage Playhouse in Gibsons, B.C. - with special guest Skye Wallace; and, March 22 at ArtSpring Theatre, Salt Spring Island, B.C. - with musical guests Aaron Trory and Rachel Saunders (also in aid of the local SPCA). Details of these and all concerts and other Allison Crowe music news can be found @ http://www.allisoncrowe.com
"In a nation that prides itself on hockey to the point of obsession, there is something else in which we can take justifiable national pride, our young, female singer-songwriters. And for my money Allison Crowe is the best of the bunch, certainly the most versatile," says veteran Canadian journalist Bruce Mason.
Witnessing these past three weeks of Tidings concerts, originals and covers, of rock, folk, jazz, pop, gospel, and blues, settles the score - without need for overtime or shootout.
Many top talents have laced up their skates over the years. Supremely rare, though, is Wayne Gretzky. Bobby Orr. And, so it is with music.
Allison Crowe is emerging as one of the true greats in her arena. From hometown glory to international audiences.
Not since a post-Schmorgs-pre-Poisoned Art Bergmann commanded the stage of Vancouver’s Commodore Ballroom has a young Canadian so purely manifest the exuberant spirit of rock and roll. Like Bruce Springsteen in his 1970s prime, Crowe delivers rock music as a religious experience. Her talent is transcendent.
And the testifying grows with each performance and recording.
Ted and Jerry Gibson, fans who traveled 650 miles, from Boise, Idaho to Victoria, B.C., for a December 8 concert were moved especially by an epic rendition of Allison Crowe’s song “Disease” - noting: “We loved it, were amazed by it, were consumed by it.” Writing in the current issue of Boulevard magazine, reviewer Robert Moyes says Crowe’s live take on “I Never Loved a Man”, (from her album “This Little Bird”), "would give Aretha Franklin goose-bumps."
Visceral North American reactions mirror those across the pond, where Allison Crowe was most recently a sensation at the John Lennon Northern Lights Festival in Durness, Scotland. Festival Director Mike Merritt describes Crowe's performance as "awesome" and "spine-tingling", adding: "Allison has put Canada well and truly on the map here!"
In a BBC documentary about the event, crowned the UK’s Best New Festival, Merritt recounts bringing Allison Crowe together with Carol Ann Duffy, the UK’s most popular living poet, and Sir Peter Maxwell Davies, the Queen’s Master of Music, on the Lennon fest’s classical music night:
“I had a nightmare, I tell you, that day. I had a string quartet coming. And, unfortunately, literally as they checked in, the cellist was taken ill. As most people know you can’t replace a cellist, especially in Durness, at the last minute.
And, so, I was left with a dilemma - what do I do? And as I mentioned earlier, everything that happened I thought went wrong, happened for a reason to be better. And I brought in Allison Crowe.”
Merritt wondered how it’d work - a 26-year-old musician from Canada bridging performances by Carol Ann Duffy, “arguably the world’s greatest poet”, and Sir Peter Maxwell Davies, “one of the world’s greatest-ever composers”. The gamble paid off magnificently. “My word, did that put hairs on the back of your neck! (Crowe’s performance) brought the house down.”
Hear John Lennon Festival Director Mike Merritt chatting with BBC Radio Scotland’s Iain Anderson and more of the BBC documentary
And hear Allison Crowe's song, “Alive and Breathing".
European and North American tour dates are in planning for 2008.