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ALLISON MOORER > Crows

Allison Moorer Crows

ALLISON MOORER

Crows

(RYKO)

[Rating: 4 stars]

When Allison Moorer stepped back after three years of almost constant touring behind the shiningly pop Getting Somewhere and the heroine-invoking Mockingbird, she exhaled and considered the colors and tones being drowned out in the go-go, now-now world of blare and bravado. Crows, with melodies that conjure more than drive, almost pearlescent guitars and lushly narcotic vocal harmonies, offers a core sample of the tides and times of the modern thinking woman.

As the patron saint of broken hearts and fallen angels, the Oscar-nominated singer/songwriter has never flinched at the hard stuff. Seven albums over the past decade have demonstrated that willingness to look into the painful placesโ€”and with the sultry torch on โ€œShould I Be Concernedโ€ and the barely-there torment of โ€œStill This Side of Goneโ€ demonstrate the Piaf-esque je ne regrette rien that makes her so raw and so strong.

However, the R.S. Field-produced song cycle is hardly a pull-the-drapes-and-draw-the-razor concoction. World-weary, yet aware that some peopleโ€™s malaiseโ€”and cureโ€”is at their own hand as the whirling-ly engaging โ€œJust Another Foolโ€ and ennui-laden โ€œWhen You Wake Up Feeling Badโ€ give way to the resolved โ€œSorrow (Donโ€™t Come Around)โ€ and even brighter โ€œItโ€™s Gonna Feel Good.โ€

Innocence is captured in the languid, backward-looking โ€œEasy in the Summertime,โ€ while the minimal cloud of strings and plucked-gut-strings of โ€œThe Stars and Iโ€ offer a hushed optimism that feels far more real than Hallmark. That defines the challenge of making music for modern times: recognizing the rigors of basic living, while imbuing a hope that is believable, embraceable amidst the effort of getting by.

Not created as a manifesto, but more a small collection of truths offering โ€œah haโ€ recognition, Crows realizes the flickers that haunt usโ€”even as it tries to shine a light to dispel those notionsโ€”can be dogged. Not Prozac-basted bromides, but broken-in examples to show there is strength in surrender and hope in whatโ€™s beyond.

Opening with a gentle cascade of notes, โ€œLike the Rainโ€ embraces natural order, and the healing power of what seems sad, but ultimately sows greater benefits than immediately seen. That is Moorerโ€™s gift: the acceptance of how it is right, now, to get to where she wants to be, and her ability to view each step as merely one more in a journey to much higher ground.

With an earthy ethereality, Moorer stakes her claim for anyone whoโ€™s ever felt like the blues was bigger than they were, but soldiered onโ€”if only because, what other option is there? Slightly bluesy, but pluckier, โ€œItโ€™s Gonna Feel Goodโ€ offers up that brightness-illuminating-the-clouds relief that is inevitable if one refuses to surrender.

In a world of quick hits and quicker fixes, an album that passes through the valleys of darkness defies convention. Somehow, there is a catharsis and an embrace of what can be just by being. Not quite Zen in its configuration, Crows is coaxingly lovely in its ministrations.