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‘It’s where I belong’: Black Belt Eagle Scout’s latest album celebrates home

When the pandemic hit in 2020, Katherine Paul, who records as Black Belt Eagle Scout, was about to head out on a tour to support her rising career.

But when everything shut down, the indie rocker instead moved from Portland, Oregon, to the Swinomish Indian Tribal Community in Washington state. Her latest album, “The Land, the Water, the Sky,” debuts Friday and was inspired by that relocation. 

Why We Wrote This

The 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.

The cover, which features the musician, depicts her connection to the ancestral lands where she grew up. It’s an extended meditation on what constitutes true home. 

“I love how sparse the music is. There’s this quiet confidence in it,” says Sterlin Harjo, showrunner for the hit TV series “Reservation Dogs,” describing the artist’s style. The show, set on an Indigenous reservation, has featured several Black Belt Eagle Scout songs. “She’s a very humble person,” he adds.

This spring, Ms. Paul will tour Europe and parts of North America. And then she’ll return to the land of Douglas firs and verdant camas. It’s where she feels grounded.

“Home is just another word for connection and love and, you know, family,” says Ms. Paul. “This place, it’s where I belong.”

The cover photo of the new Black Belt Eagle Scout album is of a woman waist-deep in Washington’s Puget Sound. The seawater behind her ripples in paisley patterns. A flotilla of clouds looks as if it’s slipped free of gravity’s last grasp. It’s meant to be evocative.

“There’s waterways and beaches of beautiful rocks and shells,” says Katherine Paul, the Native American indie rocker who records as Black Belt Eagle Scout, of the area. “And then there’s our people. Our people are here, too.”

The album, her third, debuts Friday with the title “The Land, the Water, the Sky.” Ms. Paul is the woman on the cover, which depicts her connection to the ancestral lands where she grew up. The album was inspired by her move from Portland, Oregon, to the Swinomish Indian Tribal Community in Washington state during the pandemic. It’s an extended meditation on what constitutes true home. 

Why We Wrote This

The 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.

“I love how sparse the music is. There’s this quiet confidence in it,” says Sterlin Harjo, showrunner for the hit TV series “Reservation Dogs,” describing the artist’s style. The show, set on an Indigenous reservation, has featured several Black Belt Eagle Scout songs. “She’s a very humble person,” he adds.

Black Belt Eagle Scout’s music is often serene. But her guitar can also roar like a logger’s 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, “Mother of My Children” (2017) and “At the Party With My Brown Friends” (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. 

Black Belt Eagle Scout is on the cover of her latest album. The scene depicts the musician’s connection to the area in Washington where she grew up.

“It was devastating, to be honest,” she says via Zoom. But her career woes were supplanted by worries about her parents’ poor health. She was also newly married to her drummer Camas Logue, who has two kids. Unable to perform live, money was scarce. “I had to think about my family and think about what it is that was important to me,” she says. “A sort of shift.”

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