“She
is blessed with a beautiful voice and a deep appreciation for the
tradition....each song is a new story to be shared and experienced."
Ron
Olesko, host "Traditions",
WFDU, Teaneck, NJ
Debra
Cowan was once asked what kind of songs she writes. Her reply? “Bad
ones.” Her captivating warm alto carries each folk song she chooses
with such emotion that you’ll forget that they were written by
others. She performs a cappella and with guitar in the great
tradition of folk singers like Joan
Baez and Judy
Collins, with a
clear vocal that calls forth the ghosts of long past but can also
offer a more modern urban landscape. In her newest release Fond
Desire Farewell,
she’s taken contemporary and time-honored public domain songs and
put them in a modern setting.
As
a young girl she idolized Julie
Andrews and in her teens discovered
Jethro
Tull and Steeleye
Span. At the age of 21 she needed escape
out of a small Midwestern town so she threw darts at a map and ended
up in northern California where she attended college, sang in bars,
and eventually found work as a math teacher. She continued her
discovery of folk with English singers like Sandy Denny
and Scottish
singers like Ray Fisher. Debra started performing in California 35
years ago and began touring in 1998, with frequent stops in the US
and UK, from folk clubs to festivals like the New Bedford
Summerfest
and the Dunbar Folk Festival in Scotland. That led her to where she
is now, a full-time singer who bridges the old and new with a
refreshing stage presence -- she may start with a moving ballad like
“Rainbow,” a profile of one woman’s courage, and segue into
“Johnny Be Fair,” about a poor lass who can’t marry anyone in
town because, well, she’s related to everyone.
Debra’s
shared the stage with artists as varied as Richard Shindell
and John
Renbourne. She’s performed in many prestigious UK folk clubs
and
for six months in the late 90’s held a residency at Sandy’
Bell’s
Bar, Edinburgh's premier folk music pub, following in the
footsteps
of Scottish musicians such as Dick Gaughan
and Aly Bain. She was a
2002 formal showcase artist at the Northeast Regional Folk Alliance.
This performance led to two appearances on the nationally syndicated
live radio show Folkstage,
hosted by Rich Warren.
Her earlier recordings Dad’s
Dinner Pail and Other Songs from the Helen Hartness Flanders
Collection
and The
Long Grey
Line
brought her praise from both the US and abroad. In 2006 her version
of “Walloping Window Blind” was featured in SingOut! .
Also that year, her rendition of Richard Thompson's "Has He Got
a Friend For Me" was included in the Free-Reed Records box set
RT-The
Life and
Times of Richard Thompson.
Debra's
Aunt Anita says that math education lost the best teacher it ever
had, but listen to her music and you’ll agree that education's loss
is music's gain.
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