Angela Easterling
Beguiler
(De L’Est)
[Rating: 3.5 stars]
Although she’s a small town girl from Greenville, South Carolina, Angela Easterling has been compared to a lot of heavyweights. Her songwriting has been stacked up against Steve Earleโs, and The Byrdsโ Roger McGuinn has praised Easterling’s abilty to absorb standard musical styles and spit them out with a youthful luster.
On Beguiler, the reasons why a renowned crowd is accumulating behind Easterlingโs work โ and with her in the studio โ shine through the cracks. Singer-songwriter (and guitarist for Emmylou Harris) Will Kimbrough produced and played on Easterlingโs 2009 release, Black Top Road, and returns to do the same on Beguiler. Kimbrough contributes acoustic and electric guitar, banjo, mandolin, accordion, piano, organ and harmonica. The album also feature Band of Joy bassist Byron House.
Easterlingโs debut was 2007โs Earning Her Wings, which sent up prayers and praised home, but it was also where she established a storytelling savvy that betokened the ballads to come. If she earned her wings there, she stretched them on Black Top Road, on which the songwriting, both abstract and barefaced, revolves around sorrow and unrest. Beguiler at first appears to carry a lighter load than Black Top Road, opening with the sappy but sweet โThe Fish & The Bird,โ penned by Turner, and following with the jaunty, mandolin ditty โHappy Song.โ
But fortunately, airy numbers die out in favor of Easterlingโs trademark introspection when writing about matters of conflict. โOne V. Twoโ is like a compare/contrast exercise on solitude and togetherness โ โOne is do it my way/two is a compromise/one is hedge your bets/two is roll the dice.โ On โMaria, My Friend,โ she trades buoyant folk pop for downtrodden country with bare guitars and intermittent steel, relaying spare but vivid details about a brief tryst with a brotherโs girlfriend. โShe was my brotherโs girl, green-eyed and chestnut curls/Weโd ride in his car, under the stars, our hair in the wind/And he never knew a thing, but she would take off his ring/Put her hand in mine, sneak out some cheap wine and make my head spin.โ
Easterling is at her best when she sheds her pop charms to explore more sinister subjects and tap into country roots. The percussive ode โManifest Destinyโ is an easy nod to Carrie Rodriguez or Alison Krauss with its bleak, piercing fiddles and Easterlingโs spotless vocals โ which emulate those of Krauss โ as she sings of the inevitability of land theft and development: โSome developer has a plan/Heโs gonna do something better with our land/Gonna make a lot of money with our land/Heโs made it clear that I canโt stay/Well, maybe itโs fair that I should pay/So if I lose my farm today/Thatโs just the American way.โ
โGroup Self-Deception (Itโs Alright)โ is a country-rock giddyup that blatantly lays on the guilt and points the finger โ โLies in the election with the hanging chads/They lied about the reason for a foreign attack/Lied while our economy walked the plank/They took the money from the people /Gave it all to the banks.โ But thatโs as sharply as the finger jabs; Easterling refrains from being overtly preachy while still channeling a Steve Earle brand of blue-collar blues and frustration. More Earle and Krauss comes to mind onย โJohnstown, Pennsylvania,โ a pretty piece of balladry about the devastating 19th century flood. The album ends with guest vocals from Fayssoux Starling McLean (harmony singer for Emmylou Harris) and singer-songwriter Hannah Miller on the Appalachian-style gospel number โAnchored In Love,โ often sung by The Carter Family, as the record signs off on a hopeful note.
Easterling takes Beguiler into deep water as she sings about infidelity, morality and urban sprawl, and she wonโt write a breakup song without wheedling out the most complex aspects. McGuinn describes Easterlingโs sound as โtradition meets youthful exuberance,โ but itโs more than just tradition; snappy youth is why Beguiler sparkles. But wizened lyrical depth is what could make it last.

