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With the release of her sophomore solo album All My Yesterdays, Canadian-born songwriter, singer and multi-instrumentalist Julie Gibb is as difficult to categorize as ever. While her style is reminiscent of many of the writers and musicians who have influenced her, she doesn't particularly sound like anyone else. In the eight songs featured on All My Yesterdays, you'll hear moments of Americana/Adult Contemporary, a little bit of country, and maybe even a hint of modern folk. It's hard to say exactly where she fits. Produced by Gibb, All My Yesterdays was completed with a whole lot of help from her friends. The recording process started in Nashville with songwriter/producer/engineer Cliff Goldmacher, who manned the console for the early stages of tracking and enlisted the help of Andrea Zonn (Linda Ronstadt, James Taylor, etc) on viola, Glen Caruba (Jimmy Buffett, Sara Evans, etc) on percussion, and Goldmacher played keys himself. A little later on, Tom Bukovac (Sheryl Crow, Keith Urban, etc) came in and added the bass and his guitar wizardry to the songs that Gibb felt needed a little something special that her own guitar parts weren't doing. Of the production process, she said, "It was surreal for me, hearing the songs transform as each of the players added their parts-- magical, really". All My Yesterdays is comprised of eight songs, seven of which Gibb wrote alone and one that was written by her longtime friend, Jeff Cohen, whose songwriting credits include every