Disease
An all-time great rock song and performance kicks off “16
Songs”. Here’s Allison Crowe live-in-concert –
captured by Turtle Recording’s Larry Anschell
(Engineer and Producer) and Brad Graham (Co-Engineer).
Lyrical and social themes “as we replace marble with
plastic” mesh visually with “Dreams That Money Can Buy” –
the avant garde cinematic creation of German surrealist,
Dadaist+ Hans Richter and collaborators. "The Girl with the
Prefabricated Heart", the second of DTMCB’s seven dream
sequences, is shaped by the rich vision of French painter,
sculptor, and filmmaker, Fernand Léger. This experimental
feature film received the Award for the Best Original
Contribution to the Progress of Cinematography at the
1947 Venice Film Festival.
"Power-house intense" says an European reviewer, “"the
energy of ‘Disease' can easily provide electricity to a
small country for a decade."
Writing in Süddeutsche Zeitung, a major German daily
newspaper, journalist Peter Baier sets the stage (in this
translation): “From the outset the Canadian songwriter wins
the favor of the audience and increases the expectations
with her coloratural laugh. Allison Crowe plays the piano
with a strong grip. Its sound fits perfectly to her
slightly-smoky, expressive, in short: Great voice.
Sometimes her playing recalls the keyboard-capers of
Konstantin Wecker and then there are moments to bring to
mind Modest Mussorgsky’s „Pictures at an Exhibition“.
(And in the original text: Bereits mit ihren ersten Ansagen
gewinnt die kanadische Songwriterin mit eigenem Label die
Gunst des Publikums, lässt mit ihrem Koloratur-Lachen die
Erwartung auf Weiteres ansteigen. Mit kräftigem Zugriff
spielt Allison Crowe das Klavier, zu dessen Klang ihre
leicht rauchige, ausducksstarke, kurz: große Stimme
hervorragend passt. Manchmal erinnert ihr Spiel an die
Tasten-Eskapaden eines Konstantin Wecker, dann wieder gibt
es Momente, die an den Stil von Modest Mussorgsky's „Bilder
einer Ausstellung“ denken lassen.)
“Amazing composition,” says another in the musician’s
broadly international audience, “there is so much intellect
in the music writing of Allison Crowe, which you don’t see
anywhere these days, not from the new artists nor the
established ones.”
It’s an intellect revealed in part via inspired musical
choices and its energetic expression is visceral in nature.
Energy flows from the performer on-stage to engulf
concert-goers as well. Spontaneous eruptions - stomping
feet, clapping hands, rhythmically pulsing bodies –
accompany this song (a recent bootleg video from Jazzhaus
Freiburg further testifies to this rocking reality).
#1 of 16 Songs
Labels: 16 Songs, album, Allison Crowe, avant garde, Canada, Dada, Disease, Fernand Léger, film, France, Germany, Hans Richter, live, music, New Moon, premiere, rock, surrealist, video
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