American Blues Scene featured Premiere

I realized the best route to convey this was the most literal device—fire. I don't sing 'I'm all burnt,' I sing 'I'm all burn.' I'm just fired up." - Cathy Grier

Don’t mistake “I’m All Burn” for a grammatical typo. The new video from and title track to Cathy Grier‘s new album is a not-so-subtle metaphor for her critical take on the way women are treated not only in the blues world (and the music industry as a whole) but in western society in general. “I’m fired up,” she comments.

Of “I’m All Burn,” Grier shares:

Women tend to always have to live up to a standard and a level that’s so different from men. Obviously we are different, but the question is how, not why. We need to change how we educate ourselves about each other, especially about women. Making this video was tricky. I don’t want to be preachy but, at the same time, this song has very specific content about objectification, how women still make less than men, and how, in so many ways, we’re still treated as second-class citizens. This is the one social activism song on the record, and it’s a prescient time to have it out there in light of how many women have put out great blues records this year.

There’s clearly something wrong because girls are still learning no one’s gonna stand up for them. Guys get torn apart if they show any feminine side. And it’s almost the complete reverse for women. I’ve lost count of how many times I’ve walked into a situation where I hear “Can you play that thing?” What?! Are you trying to tell me what I’m doing isn’t valid because I’m not a man? I’m not gonna sit in the studio eight hours a day, endlessly tweaking my technique so someone can put me on a list of greatest guitar players.

I’m a songwriter and a musician. I play. I need to support myself through my craft. The fire’s inside me; I’m all burn and ready to go. I didn’t pick the blues because its a groovy genre, or to get attention, I’ve been playing this all my life because it’s in my DNA.

As the song builds over a smoldering horn section, her soulful sweet vocals play out like a clever foil when you realize the lyrics she’s singing pierce like daggers. Coupled with cool changes and a relentless hook, Grier puts a modern blues spin on a ’70s pop-rock template and the result is an instantly memorable song with an equally memorable message.

The full length studio album I’m All Burn was recorded at Steve Hamilton’s Milwaukee studio, Makin’ Sausage Music with The Troublemakers and released Summer 2020. The full length studio album features such notable musicians as Greg Koch, Billy Flynn, Matt Liban, Westside Andy, Steve Cohen, Andrew Spadafora, Deirdre Fellner, and Liv Mueller. The Troublemakers core musicians are Tony Menzer bass, Jamey Clark drums, Larry Byrne keys, Jim Ohlschmidt guitar and Pauli Ryan percussion.

here’s a link to the feature at American blues Scene