In the course of a picaresque career that has taken her through both the brightly lit thoroughfares and crowded back streets of the music biz, Abbe Rivers has been an R&B diva, a street busker, a session singer, a performance artist. On her just-released solo debut, Abbe has taken on her most compelling role yet: simply being herself. For the Brooklyn born-and-raised Abbe, music has been a lifelong occupation. As she recently told a reporter in her adopted home of Hoboken, NJ: 'I don't think I ever 'became' a musician. I've been singing since I could walk. I picked up a guitar when I was 11 and pretty much taught myself. Never thought twice about it. It what's I do. It's part of who I am.' Abbe is refreshingly forthright in conversation, and she's unabashedly emotional on record. Ordinary Fool is dreamy on the outside, with gorgeously gauzy photographs and a beautifully collaged cover. But it's ballsy on the inside, filled with raw-edged rock of a truly classic kind. Abbe's songs are often soulful, a little bit bluesy, and constantly candid, with a little bit of girl-group sweetness thrown in so the going doesn't get too heavy. Abbe admits, 'My lyrics tend to be a little tortured, yet the music is often uplifting and hopeful - I guess that's the style I've developed over the years.' Ordinary Fool was produced by Abbe's longtime friend Julio Fernandez, the guitarist for veteran jazz-fusion group Spyro Gyra. Fernandez tried to give each of these tracks an in-the-moment feel, foregoing lots of overdubs to keep things as live as possible. Abbe explains, 'Recording all the basic tracks live with the musicians was the most fun. Julio has always been a fan of my live performances, and he wanted to capture the essence of what I put out on stage. There's just something about being in front of a drum kit and loud electric instruments that helps me deliver a performance I probably wouldn't get standing alone in a vocal booth. We would turn the lights down and play the shit out of the material and I would just wail. There's a joy and energy in that approach that would be hard to duplicate in any other way.' Joining Julio and Abbe in the studio was Spyro Gyra drummer Joel Rosenblatt, whose Yonkers, NY studio they used. Joel also served as an assistant producer. Say Abbe, 'It was truly an honor to have everyone involved with the project be so into it. That's the ultimate compliment: when people who you respect and admire get into your stuff. And it's their human element that gets my adrenaline going and makes me give that much more. For example, we had a great time with 'Living Without You,' which I consider my unofficial Beatle song. We even did live handclaps on that one.' Abbe brings a wealth of musical and emotional experience to Ordinary Fool, channeling into these tracks the hard knocks she's endured, along with the hopefulness she's always maintained. As a college student in New York City studying musical theater, she made the streets her stage. 'The arch in Washington Square has great acoustics and was a particular favorite of mine,' she recalls, adding that money was often better out there than in the Bleecker Street clubs in which she occasionally performed. Her early shows post-college were more theatrical in bent, as she fashioned an 'R&B/pop diva thing' for herself, which, she confesses, 'was more drama than rock and roll.' Abbe enjoyed greater success behind the scenes in the world of music publishing, penning songs for other artists an