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I Am the Mountain 4:290:00/4:29

I am the mountain back story
# Allecia Clemons: I Am the Mountain
My name is Allecia Clemons, and my voice is my testimony. Based in the rugged beauty of the Pacific Northwest on Camano Island, I have spent my life honing a sound that is as clear as the coastal air and as powerful as the tides. I am a singer-songwriter dedicated to creating ethereal, female-oriented originals that challenge the status quo and speak truth to power.
My journey in the indie music scene began with a commitment to raw, unapologetic storytelling. In 2007, I self-released my debut album, *My F%#@king Thunder*. It featured the controversial anti-war anthem "Hitler," a track that resonated far beyond the college radio circuit, eventually gaining airplay on over 500 radio stations across the United States. I followed this in 2011 with *Working Shift Joan*, where my single "Five Dollars" continued to build my footprint, reaching listeners through more than 70 stations nationwide.
However, my most recent work, "I Am the Mountain," is more than just a single; it is a declaration of survival.
Shortly after recording this track, my life was forever altered. I was brutally attacked in my own home by my ex-husband—a man who, despite the severity of the assault, was never charged and remains free today. In the wake of such a devastating violation, I had a choice: to be silenced by the trauma or to use my voice as a shield and a lighthouse for others. I chose to stand.
"I Am the Mountain" was born from the fire of that experience. It is a song about reclaiming your agency and taking your power back from those who seek to extinguish it. When I sing the lyrics, I am speaking directly to my past and to the world: *You did not destroy me.*
We are currently living through an era where domestic violence, rape, and the killing of women and children have reached epidemic proportions. I refuse to look away. This song is my battle cry for every survivor who has been forced into the shadows by a system that often fails to provide justice. It is a call for all of us to speak up, to stand strong, and to refuse to be moved.
As an artist, I believe we have a collective responsibility to demand an end to this violence. We must stand tall, unyielding and majestic, just like a mountain. Through my music, I invite you to join me in this stand—for ourselves, for our sisters, and for a future where we are no longer defined by what we have endured, but by the strength with which we rise.