鈥業t鈥檚 where I belong鈥: Black Belt Eagle Scout鈥檚 latest album celebrates home
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The cover photo of the new Black Belt Eagle Scout album is of a woman waist-deep in Washington鈥檚 Puget Sound. The seawater behind her ripples in paisley patterns. A flotilla of clouds looks as if it鈥檚 slipped free of gravity鈥檚 last grasp. It鈥檚 meant to be evocative.
鈥淭here鈥檚 waterways and beaches of beautiful rocks and shells,鈥 says Katherine Paul, the Native American indie rocker who records as Black Belt Eagle Scout, of the area. 鈥淎nd then there鈥檚 our people. Our people are here, too.鈥
The album, her third, debuts Friday with the title 鈥淭he Land, the Water, the Sky.鈥 Ms. Paul is the woman on the cover, which depicts her connection to the ancestral lands where she grew up.聽The album was inspired by her move from Portland, Oregon, to the Swinomish Indian Tribal Community聽in Washington state during the pandemic. It鈥檚 an extended meditation on what constitutes true home.聽
Why We Wrote This
A story focused onThe pandemic offered more time to reflect on the spaces we inhabit. With her latest album, Black Belt Eagle Scout celebrates how her own perspective on a familiar place changed.
鈥淚 love how sparse the music is. There鈥檚 this quiet confidence in it,鈥 says Sterlin Harjo, showrunner for the hit TV series 鈥淩eservation Dogs,鈥 describing the artist鈥檚 style. The show, set on an Indigenous reservation, has featured several Black Belt Eagle Scout songs. 鈥淪he鈥檚 a very humble person,鈥 he adds.
Black Belt Eagle Scout鈥檚 music is often serene. But her guitar can also roar like a logger鈥檚 chainsaw. She first taught herself to play by studying bootleg video tapes of Nirvana. Following her graduation from college in Portland, Ms. Paul remained in the city where she was employed by local music venues who valued her great organizational skills. She also developed her song craft. Her first two albums, 鈥淢other of My Children鈥 (2017) and 鈥淎t the Party With My Brown Friends鈥 (2019), catapulted her toward indie-rock acclaim. Then her momentum came to an abrupt halt. The pandemic scuppered her first U.S. headline tour plus shows in Europe.聽
鈥淚t was devastating, to be honest,鈥 she says via Zoom. But her career woes were supplanted by worries about her parents鈥 poor health. She was also newly married to her drummer Camas Logue, who has two kids. Unable to perform live, money was scarce. 鈥淚 had to think about my family and think about what it is that was important to me,鈥 she says. 鈥淎 sort of shift.鈥
So, in July 2020, Ms. Paul, her husband, and the children relocated to the reservation.
鈥淭he hard element was moving back in the pandemic when we couldn鈥檛 really come together,鈥 she says. 鈥淢y tribe generally likes to have a lot of events. ... And those weren鈥檛 happening. So the challenging part was just being alone a lot and not having that sense of community.鈥
Ms. Paul鈥檚 family were members of a drum group, the Skagit Valley Singers, and her father, a carver of totem poles, had sung traditional melodies to her when she was a baby.聽
鈥淥ne of the teachings that Dad had passed down to him from my grandfather is, 鈥榃hen you sing, you sing from your heart. You sing in a good way and you bring good medicine,鈥欌 she says, adding that her parents are doing fine now. 鈥淪trength and healing, I think that鈥檚 always something that I try and put into my music.鈥
Her father sings backing vocals on a softly strummed song called 鈥淪paces.鈥澛
鈥淗e does it in his style. If you were to cut out everything of that song and just have him singing those notes, and maybe there is like a drum, it would sound like a song,鈥 says Ms. Paul. 鈥淏ut because I do my own form of indie-rock music, there is this way in which it can fit together sometimes, too.鈥
Most of the songs on the album are about her yearning for connection and finding solace in her natural surroundings.
鈥淏ecause I couldn鈥檛 be close to physical people and bodies, I went to nature,鈥 she explains. 鈥淚 went to my other relatives. I went to the plants. I went to the trees, I went to the water. And I found those forms of relationships.鈥澛
A key song on the album, 鈥淪almon Stinta,鈥 expresses how the challenges of moving home made Ms. Paul want to 鈥渟cream into the sea.鈥 It鈥檚 also a song of healing. Ms. Paul wrote the song on a classical acoustic guitar with an open D tuning that she seldom used. While she was playing, she became fixated on a painting in the room titled 鈥淪almon Stinta鈥 that her husband had made for her.聽
鈥淭hen this melody came to me and I started singing what I saw in the painting,鈥 says the songwriter. 鈥淚 was singing to it because I love that painting. Here鈥檚 my offering to this painting that was created for me.鈥澛
When Mr. Harjo heard the song, he featured it at the end of Season Two of 鈥淩eservation Dogs.鈥
鈥淭here鈥檚 something about the elements that are great with her music,鈥 says Mr. Harjo, who first discovered Black Belt Eagle Scout when he filmed the documentary 鈥淟ove and Fury鈥 (available on Netflix) about Native Americans expressing themselves through art. 鈥淚t鈥檚 something that just marries so well together between her music and a really emotional scene that happens at the water, the ocean. Just a really beautiful coming together of visuals and music.鈥
This spring, Ms. Paul will tour Europe and parts of North America. And then she鈥檒l return to the land of Douglas firs, verdant camas, and bushes of salmonberries, huckleberries, and thimbleberries. It鈥檚 where she feels grounded.
鈥淗ome is just another word for connection and love and, you know, family,鈥 says Ms. Paul. 鈥淭his place, it鈥檚 where I belong.鈥