In May 1996, Eva Cassidy released the live album
Live at Blues Alley, which was the last album released before her death six months later, at the age of 33. Near the end of Cassidy's life, local folk singer
Grace Griffith sent a copy of the album to Bill Straw, the head of her label, Blix Street Records. Straw approached the Cassidy family to put together a new album. In 1998, a compilation of tracks from Cassidy's three released recordings was assembled into what would become
Songbird. This CD lingered in relative obscurity for two years until it was given airplay by
Terry Wogan on his wide-reaching
BBC Radio 2 show
Wake Up to Wogan, following recommendation by his producer
Paul Walters. The album sold 100,000 more copies in the following months.
The New York Times spoke of her "silken soprano voice with a wide and seemingly effortless range, unerring pitch and a gift for phrasing that at times was heart-stoppingly eloquent." ==Chart performance==