* En anglais uniquement
As the last of the
Pistol Annies to release her own album,
Angaleena Presley wasn't a superstar on the level of
Miranda Lambert, nor was she quite the Music City survivor like
Ashley Monroe. Instead, she was a behind-the-scenes songwriter who received a boost once she became part of
the Annies. Once the group's 2011 debut Hell on Heels turned into a success, it was a matter of time before
Presley received her own record contract, which she did in 2014, when she released
American Middle Class.
By the time that album came out in the fall of 2014,
Presley had been working away in Nashville for the better part of 15 years. A native of Martin County, Kentucky, where she was born to a school teacher mother and coal miner father,
Presley began playing music as a teenager but didn't pursue it seriously until she left Eastern Kentucky University. She moved to Nashville in 2000, landing a publishing deal not long afterward. It took her a while to land songs on records, but they started to come toward the end of the decade, with "Knocked Up" appearing on
Heidi Newfield's 2008 LP
What Am I Waiting For? and "Look It Up" showing up on
Ashton Shepherd's 2011 album
Where Country Grows. Her real break, though, was meeting
Ashley Monroe, a singer/songwriter who was with the same publisher and brought
Presley to the attention of
Miranda Lambert. The trio formed
Pistol Annies in 2011 and collaborated on the songs that became their debut Hell on Heels. A gold success in the U.S., the record generated a 2013 sequel called Annie Up, a record that didn't do quite as well as the debut but still performed respectably. A year after Annie Up,
Presley finally released her long-awaited debut
American Middle Class on Slate Creek; it debuted at 29 on the U.S. country charts. Three years later,
Presley released
Wrangled, her second solo album featuring cameos by
Morgane Stapleton and
Yelawolf, plus songs co-written by
Chris Stapleton and
Guy Clark. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine