Top tracks
Listeners also bought
Other Modern Folk albums
Other like Ani albums
Put your hands on the remote! browse music »Privilege by Allette Brooks
view larger image
fave it Modern Folk | like Ani
12 tracks | 49 minutes
Released Sep 2001
on Allette Brooks
Click
for a 30-second preview. All tracks are 192kbps high fidelity sound quality. Protected WMA $0.77 or unprotected MP3 $0.88.
listen album 30sec. shuffle buy CD review album promote album
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 05:51 Hello lyrics BUY MP3 05:51 Hello lyrics "GIFT MP3" 05:51 Hello
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 04:30 Ladder lyrics BUY MP3 04:30 Ladder lyrics "GIFT MP3" 04:30 Ladder
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 05:35 Clothes Line lyrics BUY MP3 05:35 Clothes Line lyrics "GIFT MP3" 05:35 Clothes Line
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 03:48 My Brother, My Sister lyrics BUY MP3 03:48 My Brother, My Sister lyrics "GIFT MP3" 03:48 My Brother, My Sister
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 04:31 Heaven in the Mirror lyrics BUY MP3 04:31 Heaven in the Mirror lyrics "GIFT MP3" 04:31 Heaven in the Mirror
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 04:25 Swallow lyrics BUY MP3 04:25 Swallow lyrics "GIFT MP3" 04:25 Swallow
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 02:06 Lay Me Down On Redrock lyrics BUY MP3 02:06 Lay Me Down On Redrock lyrics "GIFT MP3" 02:06 Lay Me Down On Redrock
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 03:39 Privilege lyrics BUY MP3 03:39 Privilege lyrics "GIFT MP3" 03:39 Privilege
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 03:54 Seated in Six lyrics BUY MP3 03:54 Seated in Six lyrics "GIFT MP3" 03:54 Seated in Six
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 04:18 Passage of Time lyrics BUY MP3 04:18 Passage of Time lyrics "GIFT MP3" 04:18 Passage of Time
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 03:33 Mystery lyrics BUY MP3 03:33 Mystery lyrics "GIFT MP3" 03:33 Mystery
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 03:18 Outta Here lyrics BUY MP3 03:18 Outta Here lyrics "GIFT MP3" 03:18 Outta Here
Inspired by this artist's experiences in Africa and at Stanford University, where her exposure to environmental problems and gender, race and economic inequities mobilized and energized her poetry.
Bio / Background
Allette Brooks is a passionate and articulate singer-songwriter, committed to working towards healing on individual, community and global levels. She is a dedicated yoga practitioner, teaching Forrest Yoga (make this a link to www.forrestyoga.com) at home in New Haven, CT and on the road.
Allette has released three self-produced CDs and sold over 5000 copies. She's a classically trained vocalist now singing acoustic folk. She didn't pick up her instrument of choice, a guitar, until she was studying ecology in Botswana as a college junior. She played until her fingers bled (this actually happened!) and then jumped into national touring four years later, playing over a hundred shows each year and winning fans from Astoria, OR., to Brunswick, ME.
In 2004, Allette took a hiatus from touring to pursue her longtime vision of studying music about HIV/AIDS in Botswana.
↓ more ↓In May 2006, Allette completed her MA in African Studies at Yale University with a thesis titled, “Music and HIV/AIDS in Botswana: Rearticulating Relationships Through Song.” (link to this?)
Allette’s recent experiences doing fieldwork in Africa, teaching yoga, and turning thirty have inspired a spate of new songs, including Lofoka, ‘the scent of rain’, written in Setswana. Stay tuned for gigs and recording plans in 2007!
Allette released her latest album, "Swim With Me" in November 2001, and continued to tour extensively including stops at the National Women’s Music Festival, The Tucson folk Festival and Notably, the Emerging Artists Showcase at the Falcon Ridge Folk Festival. Known after the title of her second album, as the “Silicon Valley Rebel”, Allette was interviewed as part of a BBC syndicated radio documentary about the development of the infamous Silicon Valley. Her songs Rolling Blackout and Driving were featured in the musical accompaniment to the program. An avid swimmer, Allette would search for a place to swim at every stop during a tour. Her hydro-tours made a splash and The National Pool and Spa Journal published a story about Allette’s aquatic passion in their bi-monthly magazine. Her deep connection with the earth is evidenced in her songs, as comments on ecological issues mingle with colorful imageries of the natural world. Recognizing this, Whole Earth Magazine recently included Allette in their feature on Eco-folk music. As part of her Swim With Me tour, Allette opened several shows for Al Stewart and entertained audiences across the country at venues ranging from Club Passim to the Freight and Salvage.
Allette's deft touch and razor sharp wit leaves listeners laughing at themselves and our species, while marveling at her skill on the strings. A student of human biology, she recognizes the complexity of environmental/social issues. She focuses on raising awareness rather than preaching solutions. Although, she says, "Being a folk artist, as opposed to being a mainstream pop artist, is inherently political. It's a choice to relate to people on a different level, to be really honest, to be open-hearted, and to be yourself." Her audiences respond with delight to that honesty, as well as her strong stage presence, intelligence, sarcastic wit and clear love of her art and theater. In an average show, audience members vote, sing, and take a quiz or two.
Some highlights from her latest release include: Rolling Blackout, a social and ecological commentary about Americans’ excessive use of energy; Same Room, which gives voice to the fear and isolation of a child immigrant; an ode to the magnificence of Midwestern fireflies; Ice Age, the geologist breakup song; and a piece written in the Okavango Delta in Botswana that has been an interactive hit with live audiences.
The title track of her second disk, "Silicon Valley Rebel," paints a sketch of a feminist friend who bikes her environmental, gender and economic viewpoints to the corporate cubicle where she is a diva web page designer.
Her first album, "Privilege," was inspired by experiences in Africa and at Stanford, where her exposure to environmental problems and gender, race and economic inequities mobilized and energized her poetry.
Allette has produced her own CDs, choosing the artistic integrity and freedom over security -- and giving herself the time to get each track just right.
↑ less ↑






