
Savannah native Ashley Rauls is all of 19 years old, but her song lyrics hint at an old soul lying deep within somewhere.
Raulsโ debut EP, the fiveโsong What You Want Me To Be, is a mostlyโacoustic exercise in looking back, looking forward and looking โ with astonishingly mature eyes โ at the present.
The young singer/songwriter will celebrate the recordโs arrival with a show Thursday, Dec. 27 at Satisfied, the former Locoโs. Sheโll sing and play guitar, with assist from Maconโs Shane Bridges Band, the outfit that backed her on the recording (the Bridges band will perform, sans Ashley, the next night at Saddle Bags).
A sophomore at Furman University in Greenville, S.C., Rauls is home for the holidays.
For this listener, the hook on What You Want Me to Be is her voice, which has a sweet but slightly worldโweary timbre. She sings like a little girl whoโs making her way through a big โol world.
โI donโt really consider myself a singer,โ the English major tells me. โItโs just about the music and the lyrics for me.โ Rauls says she made the EP simply as a means to an end. โItโs just that you have to sing your stuff, or no one can hear it.โ Her hope is that What You Want Me to Do will serve as a calling card, to get gigs.
Bridgesโ production gives the record a gentle Americana, country/rock feel. Thereโs acoustic guitar, atmospheric banjo and harmonica, and the occasional bass and drums. โAt first, I was worried that it was going to push me towards country,โ Rauls says, โbecause I donโt even know what to categorize myself as. I donโt even know how to put a label on myself. I wouldnโt say Iโm trying to be the next Taylor Swift. But Iโm really pleased with how it worked out.โ
Although Rauls โ who started taking music lessons as a toddler โ also plays piano and violin, she has no intention of abandoning her schoolwork and her pursuit of a graduate degree. โIโve always enjoyed music for fun,โ she explains, โand Iโve always said I want to do it growing up โ itโs something you can do forever. When I was a junior and senior in high school, I started writing a lot more, and putting chords with the words. I got better at guitar, and Iโve written a lot more in college.โ
From โMile Long Smileโ to โAddictedโ and an impossibly catchy piece called โPeter Has My Vote,โ Raulsโ EP is full of colorful acoustic twists and turns.
โThis is a really new thing for me,โ she says. โIโve never considered โIโm a musician, rock โnโ roll, drop out of school and go on the road.โ Iโve never considered that. Itโs a really hard balance now to be a dedicated student and keep up with my work, get good grades, and also try to book gigs and be in the music business.โ But I think itโs definitely worth it.
โBut I donโt want to be famous. I donโt want to be in the tabloids or anything. I just want to do it for fun and see what happens.โ
Until you do something, she says โ wise beyond her years โ youโll never really know what it was like. โI donโt want to wake up one day, be married and have kids, and say โWhat did I ever do with my music?โโ
The show is at 8 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 27, at Satisfied on Broughton St.
This article appears in Dec 26, 2012 – Jan 2, 2013.
