Reviews

Ron Sexsmith

"Kate Steele has a truly beautiful voice and a real natural way with a song."
-- Ron Sexsmith


Leeroy Stagger

"Kate's new record is a beautiful mix of Margo Timmins-esque vocals and barefoot, rootsy imagery."
-- Leeroy Stagger

BeatRoute Magazine

"With a field as full as the female singer songwriter genre, it takes something really special to differentiate itself. Not only does it take a person of exceptional talent, but often it will even take these lucky few a couple of albums to really find their niche. Not so with Kate Steele on this, her debut album. First, Steele shows tremendous maturity in her lyrics. They are earnest and poignant and, more importantly, devoid of any pretentious wordplay that often mars other entries in this genre. These refreshingly honest lyrics are wrapped in Steele's beautiful voice. Her control over this, her most valuable instrument, again belies this being her first full length album. Her arrangements tread a fine line between country and folk, throwing in dobro and mandolin from time to time as accents. The result is one of the finest first outings I have ever heard, and I already look forward to the next."
--Matt Chomistek of Beatroute Magazine, Calgary

Coke Machine Glow

"The Rolling Stones were right: sometimes it's the singer, not the song. Folk singer Kate Steele has a brave, proud voice, the kind you imagine ringing out over amber waves of grain as she packs her bags and heads out west. Like Hem's Sally Ellyson, there's a richness and clarity in Steele's instrument that's both undeniable and undeniably well-suited to its owner's chosen genre. Curve of the Earth Steele's debut album, is a set of roots music as serious as She & Him's similarly vintage recent set is campy, twelve songs crackling into flame and billowing up into the prairie air."
-- David Greenwald, Cokemachineglow.com

Monday Magazine

"Following the best in the singer-song writer tradition, Steele's music presents honest and playful, if somewhat melancholy, reflections on life. The track "Trouble," for example, empathises with an unnamed protagonist who is subject to constant scrutiny from the narrow-minded, lest he exhibit what they think are signs of a mental disorder. And "First to Lose" laments the silence that greets the evidence of domestic violence on a fellow student's face. But sandwiched between the two tracks is "Talking to Him," in which Steele wraps a voice as clear as the Saskatchewan sky around the zydeco styling of an accordion and an offbeat ska rhythm. The song, in which a woman informs a past lover that she was thinking of Bob Dylan when she said she loved him, snaps along with gentle authority."
--Mark Vardy, Monday Magazine, Victoria

BC Musician Magazine

"This is like Joni Mitchell crossed with my favorite Bruce Cockburn stuff. Just another chick with a guitar? I suppose- but when you hear lines like "Just because the first time that I told you that I love you/ we were listening to Dylan and I was talking to him"ˇ you have to appreciate the way she looks around the corners."

Sounding Icelandic, Winnipeg

"Kate Steele's stunning Curve of the Earth easily sounds like a third or fourth release from a seasoned folk artist. That it's actually her debut makes it truly remarkable."