
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 placesโand with the sultry torch on โShould I Be Concernedโ and the barely-there torment of โStill 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 peopleโs malaiseโand cureโis at their own hand as the whirling-ly engaging โJust Another Foolโ and ennui-laden โWhen You Wake Up Feeling Badโ give way to the resolved โSorrow (Donโt Come Around)โ and even brighter โItโs Gonna Feel Good.โ
Innocence is captured in the languid, backward-looking โEasy in the Summertime,โ while the minimal cloud of strings and plucked-gut-strings of โThe 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 โah haโ recognition, Crows realizes the flickers that haunt usโeven as it tries to shine a light to dispel those notionsโcan be dogged. Not Prozac-basted bromides, but broken-in examples to show there is strength in surrender and hope in whatโs beyond.
Opening with a gentle cascade of notes, โLike the Rainโ embraces natural order, and the healing power of what seems sad, but ultimately sows greater benefits than immediately seen. That is Moorerโs 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 whoโs ever felt like the blues was bigger than they were, but soldiered onโif only because, what other option is there? Slightly bluesy, but pluckier, โItโs 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.
