Crow And Gazelle “Fall How It Will” – more than one way to love

Photo: Myriam Riand

Who are Crow and Gazelle? Well, we can share this about the Texas-based duo: Crow and Gazelle is Oklahoma Red Dirt pioneer Mike McClure and multidisciplinary artist Chrislyn Lawrence. McClure is a founding member of The Great Divide and an Oklahoma Music Hall of Fame inductee, and is also a widely respected producer whose work has helped shape artists including Cross Canadian Ragweed, Turnpike Troubadours, and Kaitlin Butts. Lawrence brings an equally vital perspective as a poet, filmmaker, community organiser, and trauma-informed healer. What is the one thing we can’t tell you? Which one is Crow and which one is Gazelle. We could make a guess, but it would be informed by so many prejudging preconceptions and conform to a narrow set of societal norms and assumptions. So, like Meatloaf, we won’t do that.

Fall How It Will is a pivotal song in the duo’s new album Truth Be Told, which is out on May 15th. The album is a connected narrative which tells the story of a woman and a man navigating a collapsing world, reckoning with inherited harm, confronting patriarchal control, and searching for a more liberated way to live and love. Told from a female perspective, Fall How It Will tells of a struggle between accepting boundaries of love and taking risks with one’s heart as opposed to conforming to a rigidly imposed definition of what is acceptable within a narrowing confine of religious strictures, with an origin myth of original sin carried forever down countless generations.

We live in a world shaped by shame that was never truly ours to carry,” Lawrence explains. “When you’re taught to believe you are inherently unworthy, that love only counts if it looks a certain way, it creates fear and separation. But love, real love, draws us back to the truth. It reminds us there was never anything wrong with us to begin with.”

About Jonathan Aird 3279 Articles
Sure, I could climb high in a tree, or go to Skye on my holiday. I could be happy. All I really want is the excitement of first hearing The Byrds, the amazement of decades of Dylan's music, or the thrill of seeing a band like The Long Ryders live. That's not much to ask, is it?
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