Angela Easterling
BlackTop Road – Out July 14 – Produced
by Will Kimbrough
The genesis for Angela Easterling’s new album, BlackTop
Road, actually started in 1791 in Greer, SC. That’s when her mother’s
family started the farm that eventually, as farms go, was cut by a road that
now bears their name. It’s not a new story, but it’s a personal story, acutely
told by the angelic singer who started writing her second record when she
returned home to South Carolina, and began putting together the pieces of place
and family to better steer the future by.
And, Easterling had only one producer in mind for the project --Will Kimbrough, a multi-award
winning artist, musician and producer, known for his solo work and with folks
such as Todd Snider, Rodney Crowell, Kate Campbell, and Jimmy Buffett just to
name just a few.
It was a shift from the shoestring budget of Easterling’s
debut, Earning Her Wings, even though the record won raves - named the
top Americana CD of the year by Smart Choice music and emerging on many top-ten
lists, landing her on stages
with music legend Ray Price, Suzy Bogguss, Radney Foster and Lori McKenna.
But on BlackTop Road, Kimbrough assembled an A-list
team -- including Al Perkins, Fats Kaplin, Ken Coomer, Anne McCue and Dave
Jacques, with Kimbrough filling in the gaps.
“I was very nervous
about working with such an esteemed gathering of musicians, but Will was
careful to make sure I was at ease and had fun throughout the whole
experience,” shares Easterling. “He has great ideas but is always open and
willing to try my ideas too, bringing out aspects of my songs I never would
have even known were there.”
About the sessions, Kimbrough
says, "I produced Angela Easterling's record, but all I had to do is show
up for class and play along. She is a powerful, focused artist who has
done her homework: rock-n-roll, country, bluegrass, literature and French
pop."
Easterling’s songs run
the range of emotions of a woman fully assessing her family’s past and present
with a new life perspective, juxtaposing the personal with outside forces. Anger and fear of the
mistreatment of her family and farm sear through the title track, and “The Picture” employs a fictional father-daughter relationship to personalize remnants of America’s
shameful past. “Big Wide
World,” while playful, is an expression of a modern woman’s frustration,
and the book The Lovely Bones provides the backdrop of the haunting
“Field of Sorrow,” underscored by banjo and fiddle.
She also explores place
and heritage in terms of musical roots, finding kinship with both the famous
and familial. She captured the spirit of
the wandering soul of A.P. Carter after visiting his home and graveside --
tying it in with her own searching on “A.P Carter Blues,” and takes on Neil
Young’s “Helpless,” with a sweet mountain vocal. And she updates “Stars Over The
Prairie,” not a famous song, but penned by her great-grandfather in the 40s.
“This is a very personal album for me,” says Angela.
“There is so much of my family in it. The themes are family and home and
looking for a home. I think there is also a theme of where the past, present
and future intersect and have an effect on each other. Sometimes it seems like
the future is trying to destroy the past. But we can’t escape the past; it
still haunts us.”
There is joy here, too, both in love (“Better” and “Just Like Flying”) and in finding oneself exactly where one wants
to be (“Birmingham.”) And where she wants to be -- is onstage
performing. “As much as I love writing, a song doesn’t seem real until you have
shared it with others. Then it takes on a life of its own and doesn’t belong to
me anymore, it belongs to everyone. I feel so blessed and fortunate to be able
to make my way through the world by sharing my music and my stories.”
Easterling
was selected as a New Folk Finalist at 2009 Kerrville Folk Festival and offered
an official showcase at this year’s Americana Music Conference. “BlackTop Road”
was in the top five for radio adds the first three weeks of its release and
debuted in the Americana top 40 for airplay in early September. It was also
named a top pick in both Oxford American and Country Weekly.
To see recording session photos, click here
For info:
www.angelaeasterling.com
www.myspace.com/angelaeasterling
Kim Fowler
Two Dog Media
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615.228.7177 / M: 615.500.4315
©2009 AngelaEasterling.com
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