‘Stronger’ Kate Earl
Kate Earl admits to feeling a tad lost before completing her third album, Stronger. Seems she was stuck performing someone elses vision and only now has she begun to realize one of her own.
The trouble with Stronger is that Earls vision is an ineffectual grasp at simple substance through song. The soft-rock tunes are too simple and the results too routine.
Earl gallops into view atop the horse trot cadenced title track, Stronger, in which she lauds the hard road traveled to relevance and maturity. That would all be great fodder for a song if shed come up with better lyrics.
It gets worse. One Woman Army sounds too much like 10,000 Maniacs Like the Weather. California sounds way too much like the Steve Miller Bands The Joker – and you get the idea. Earl is too close to her reference material, which weakens her own vision.
On Loyalty, Earl finally displays some of the rough-edged hurt that the album could have used more of. Sad strains of reverbed guitar back her nicely as she sings of rescuing a friend in need.
She has a smooth, pleasing voice and when you sound (and look) like Earl you get a second and perhaps a third chance to make it in music. But even the deft hand of seasoned musicians like Brett Dennen and Blake Mills cant salvage this artistically tepid release.