RUSTY SHIPP – Album Review: “Capsized Empire”

Cover artwork by Hein Zaayman

Few acts I know of have mined a novel theme as successfully and consistently throughout their career as has Nashville rock band Rusty Shipp. I’ve previously featured them numerous times on this blog, but to summarize, the band is the brain child of singer-songwriter and guitarist Russ T. Shipp (his actual birth name is Russell Thomas Shipp), who call themselves a “Nautical Rock’n’Roll” band with a sound influenced by “the melodic chord progressions of The Beatles, the surf guitar of Dick Dale, the grunge rock of Nirvana, and the heavy metal of Led Zeppelin“. As their name suggests, their music is characterized by a dark, immersive sound, unforgettable melodies, electrifying guitar work, and Shipp’s vibrant tenor vocals. Like many bands, they’ve undergone numerous personnel changes since forming in 2014, and now consist of the aforementioned Russ Shipp on guitar and vocals, AJ Newton on drums, Dave Gajda on lead guitar, and Doug Webster on bass.

Band photo from their Facebook account.

In keeping with their name, all Rusty Shipp albums have been concept albums built around nautical themes, starting with Mortal Ghost in 2017, followed by Liquid Exorcist in 2019, Dark Side of the Ocean in 2022, and now their fourth and latest album Capsized Empire (its official title is Cosmic Innuendo, Vol. II: Capsized Empire), released on June 27th. (I reviewed both Liquid Exorcist and Dark Side of the Ocean, which you can read here and here.)  Whereas Vol. I: Dark Side of the Ocean explored the balance between dark and light, descent and ascent, and men and angels, Vol II: Capsized Empire tells the fictional story of an evil band of pirates who set sail on a sinister mission, dismissing the prophetic warnings of an old sailor on the pier who warns of a worse fate for them than the gallows if they stay on their course. The band further states that the fictional story “is ultimately a masked philosophical message warning of people living their lives in a self-inflicted apocalypse.” 

To accompany their ambitious album, which features 17 tracks – ten full length songs and seven interludes that drive the story forward and provide a connection between the primary songs – the band has also written a detailed narrative for the story, some of which I’ll include here:

The story of ‘Capsized Empire’ is actually two stories. One is clearly told through this album’s narration and imagery-laced lyrics, and picks up where ‘Cosmic Innuendo Vol. I’ left off: when the warrior sea angels with the royal title ‘Nautical Sea Lords’ ascended from The Dark Side of the Ocean up to its surface to find out why the souls of men are sinking down to their kingdom with increasing frequency. And what do the Nautical Sea Lords find when they reach the land of men? Probably the worst example of man there is, which leads to the second story…

The other story is the more covert one that’s told through the philosophical lyrics of each song, creating a parallel undercurrent to the surface-level fiction story. This story addresses the problem of evil in the world. Each song responds to this problem from a different angle – as we hear from the voices of those grappling with the painful consequences of evil, as well as from those inflicting the pain. As the album progresses, philosophical layer is built upon layer to expand the intellectual understanding and emotional empathy to all affected by this problem (which is ALL OF US) to hopefully stir up outrage that leads to activism, but also to filter that justice through the ultimate solution (which is love and grace).

Back cover of the album

The album opens with the slowly-building and ominous 40-second-long instrumental track “What The Tide Washed In“, quickly followed by “All Aboard!“, which I featured on a Fresh New Tracks post in February. As I wrote then, the song is a wonderful hard-driving rocker, with a roiling torrent of grungy guitars joined by blistering surf guitar solos in the second half, and nicely accompanied by AJ’s aggressive drums, a terrific organ and Russ’s dynamic spine-tingling vocals. The band calls this their first theme song, as expressed by the lyrics “All aboard this hallowed, rusty ship. Won’t you join us on our voyage away from suffering, into our destiny? With love and spirit pointing us true north, we’ll make it through the storm and build a kingdom we can call our home.

Next up is “Espionage“, another hard-hitting track fueled by gnarly guitars and thunderous drums, detailing the sea angels’ efforts to observe the ways of mankind: “Call it Espionage in ocean camouflage, spinning up and down between two kingdoms, searching for a sign of intelligent life. Find out what these men are made of.” Their search leads them to a pub where they find a group of salty sailors singing the old traditional sea shanty “Spanish Ladies“: “Farewell and adieu to you, Spanish Ladies. Farewell and adieu you ladies of Spain. For we’ve received orders for to sail for old England, and we may ne’er see thee fair ladies again. We’ll rant and we’ll roar like true British sailors. We’ll rant and we’ll roar all on the salt seas until we strike soundings in the channel of old England. From Ushant to Scilly is thirty-five leagues.

On The Docks” explores the dichotomy between men who inherently strive to be good people and make a living through honorable means with those who choose a darker path of thievery and exploitation of others: “The difference in a sailor and a pirate is their consciences. And if his conviction is growling louder than the howling of his stomach could it be that a pirate’s greed is the same old thing as a shark’s instinct? Who didn’t have the pedigree or luck to evolve into a sailor’s breed. ‘Cause on the docks we swim with sharks, trying to get a bite. ‘Cause who has time to tread the lines between the dark and light, But if you would pay my daily wage, then I’ll put away my net. Show me something I need more than food and I’ll fish for that instead.” I love the song’s breezy melody and the wonderful mix of twangy and surf guitars.

Black Market Jam” is a spoken word track describing some of the sailors engaging in nefarious activities like black market trade and human trafficking beneath the pier, followed by “Neck Breaker“, a bluesy and grungy rock song of warning to those sailors by an old prophet who predicts the harrowing fate that awaits them: “You’re wanted dead or alive, up to you which one they decide. So ride, but you gotta land sometime, and when you do, oh, you fool, the gallows will be waiting for you. You’re gonna hang from the head until you’re dead, dead, dead. Make your bed with the fishes.” The prophet then issues a curse on their captain on the spoken word interlude “The Curse of Robert Williams“, in which he warns him to turn the ship around and not proceed with their evil mission.

Bound and determined to go forward with their piracy, the sailors are self-proclaimed “Tough Guys“, blinded by their bad-ass bravado as they snarl “Yeah, we’re bad dudes, rockin’ tattoos, with our black shoes. Yeah, we’re tough guys, giving black eyes, as we’re cruisin’ by. Blame it on our daddy issues, blame it on whatever you want. Glad you got us figured out ’cause now we’re gonna come burn down your town!” Over a powerful chugging rhythm, the band layers some blistering guitar work, accompanied by gruff vocals that nicely convey their menacing message. Next up is “Aquamoto“, a terrific little instrumental tour de force of killer surf guitars that would make Dick Dale proud, making it one of my favorite tracks on the album. This is then followed by the spiritual track “Don’t You Grieve Us“, ostensibly sung by the kidnapped trafficking victims huddled in the hull of the ship.

Every Rusty Shipp album includes a cover of a classic rock song by a famous band – Mortal Ghost featured the Beatles song “Helter Skelter”, Liquid Exorcist featured Audioslave’s “Show Me How to Live”, and Dark Side of the Ocean includes a shortened cover of Pink Floyd’s “Us and Them“, from their masterpiece Dark Side of the Moon. For Capsized Empire, the band chose Paul & Linda McCartney’s “1882“. I wasn’t familiar with this rather unusual McCartney song, which tells the story of an impoverished boy of the servant class who faces stern consequences for stealing a loaf of bread from the big house upstairs. Rusty Shipp has reimagined and elevated the song into a darkly beautiful and gut wrenching number that here applies to slaves freed by President Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation, but who were unlawfully kidnapped and taken to Cuba where slavery was still legal at the time – sadly echoed by the cruel and unlawful deportations now being perpetrated by the Trump regime (my opinion). The guitar work and Russ’s impassioned vocals are stunning.

Russ unleashes the fury of his wrath for those who would prey on the innocent on “Nefarious“: “You, you are so despicable. Herding little girls like some kind of cattle, but you’re the animal. You have all devolved into a primal impulse. No trace of a soul, you’re nefarious.” The song is sonically magnificent, though, with haunting piano keys and a grandiose arrangement that reminds me of a few songs by English rock band Muse. And in fact, Russ’s fervent falsetto seems to channel Matt Bellamy when he really lets loose. I love this track!

Scallywags” is another gorgeous and powerful rock song, with intense reverb-soaked guitars, throbbing bass and thunderous percussion creating an explosive, yet highly melodic soundscape. The lyrics speak to the ideas that evil is inherent in all of us to some degree, who are we to judge others, and that only through grace can we overcome our sins: “Scallywag buccaneers, black market blackbirders. So easy pointing fingers at the Neros and Blackbeards. But Rome wasn’t built in a day, and neither was its tyrant. It took centuries to make a culture to enthrone them. Love these enemies, and turn your cheek till they nail your hands and feet. Grace alone can save the world by breaking the chain of revenge. But I’m seething, can’t hardly see a thing except this blinding rage. Don’t wanna give the Lord all the revenge. ‘Cause I hate you, but I create you when I treat them the same way you were treated.” This immediately segues into “Counsel of Sea Lords“, a brief interlude featuring spoken word vocals of multiple Shippmates detailing the findings and judgements against the pirates by the Nautical Sea Lords.

The interlude track “Upside Down Kingdom” continues with the theme laid out on “Scallywags”, that so long as humans continue their endless cycle of retribution and revenge for wrongs committed against them (sound familiar to a certain evil President?), the world and mankind will never fully recover: “Ooh, Hell and Heaven are two kingdoms waging war within us. And every choice you make builds one, either death or life to come. When you repay good for evil you pull a brick out from the wall of Hell to build up the kingdom of Heaven. A step closer to Shalom.”

The album closes with “Sinners In The Hands“, a raucus rock song that brings everything full circle, that we are all sinners in the hands of a loving God who through his son set an example for us to follow of giving love and forgiveness to the sinful people in our lives, lest the world topple over as a capsized empire: “So never judge an evil man, for the greatest of all saints were once the vilest sinners who got a taste of saving grace. The same grace is calling out, reaching out for you right now. And has been for all your life to make you fully alive!

To sum up, Capsized Empire is another epic, brilliantly-executed concept album by Rusty Shipp. As with their previous albums, everyone involved in its recording and production did a masterful job creating a work that’s flawlessly arranged and beautifully crafted on every level. But most of all, a great deal of credit must go to Russ Shipp’s incredible vision, imagination and talents as a songwriter, musician and vocalist.

Here’s Capsized Empire on Bandcamp:

And on YouTube:

Rusty Shipp Socials: Website / Facebook / Twitter / Instagram
Find their music on BandcampSpotify / Apple Music / Soundcloud / deezer / YouTube

RUSTY SHIPP – Album Review: “Dark Side of the Ocean”

One of the more uniquely interesting acts I’ve featured on this blog is Nashville rock band Rusty Shipp. The brain child of front man Russ T. Shipp (his actual birth name is Russell Thomas Shipp), Rusty Shipp is a self-described “Nautical Rock’n’Roll” band, with a sound influenced by, in their own words, “the melodic chord progressions of The Beatles, the surf guitar of Dick Dale, the grunge rock of Nirvana, and the heavy metal of Led Zeppelin“. As their name would suggest, their music is characterized by a dark, immersive sound, unforgettable melodies, electrifying guitar work, and Shipp’s vibrant tenor vocals. Like many a band, they’ve experienced numerous changes in lineup since forming in 2014, and now consist of the aforementioned Russ Shipp on guitar and vocals, AJ Newton on drums, Dave Gajda on lead guitar, and Doug Webster on bass.

Photo by Chad Fenner

Rusty Shipp released an EP Hold Fast to Hope in 2014, then followed in 2017 with their highly-acclaimed debut album Mortal Ghost. They dropped several singles throughout 2019, which culminated in the release that November of their phenomenal second album Liquid Exorcist, which I reviewed. In keeping with their nautical theme, the album is a concept work built around the subject of sea mine terrorism. This past January, starting with “Bottom of the Barrel”, they began releasing what would become a series of nine singles at the rate of one per month. All of those songs and more are featured on their latest album Dark Side of the Ocean, which dropped October 28th.

An ambitious work, Dark Side of the Ocean (its official title is Cosmic Innuendo, Vol 1: Dark Side of the Ocean), is another nautically-themed concept album, this time exploring the balance between dark and light, descent and ascent, and men and angels. About the album, Shipp explains: “While it was written and recorded during the pandemic, instead of following the natural response of the world to react to the crisis with fear by retreating into our comfortable “Us and Them” sects and blaming “Them” as the problem and the bad guys, this album tried very hard (as challenging as it was at the time) to focus on the commonalities and good that still exist in all people and the hope that still exists for our world to bring us all together and get all our needs met.

Shipp wrote the lyrics, co-wrote the music with band drummer Newton, and did the arrangements. The album was produced by Stephen Leiweke at Yackland Studio in Nashville, and mastered by Alex McCollough. The gorgeous artwork was created by Hein Zaayman.

With a few nods to Pink Floyd, including its title, the album is divided into two parts: The first half (consisting of 21 ½ minutes), called “DESCENT”, follows the descent of a drowned sailor, sinking past undiscovered creatures and mysteries to the bottom of the ocean, where his soul is intercepted by a group of sea angels and taken to their underwater kingdom. The 2nd half of the album (also 21 ½ minutes long) is called “ASCENT”, and explores this angelic kingdom, ruled by Poseidon, the king archangel of the ocean. After debating the danger involved, the angels decide to ascend and discover why men’s souls are sinking from the ocean’s surface with increased frequency, with feelings of duty to help these men in the world above the waves, which the angels ironically call “Heaven.” Read the full story here.

The album opens with the title track, a 33-second-long spoken word introductory piece accompanied by eerie underwater sounds and a building guitar riff, informing us that the ocean contains 99% of Earth’s living space, yet 80% of it has never been mapped, much less explored. We have better maps of the surface of the moon than of the ocean floor, and with scientists estimating that there are as many as 90% of ocean species still undiscovered, one has to wonder what else could be down there at the bottom of our planet…the dark side of the ocean.

Those grungy, jagged riffs are quickly joined by a torrent of aggressive drumbeats as we’re launched headlong into “Living Waters“. Shipp passionately sings of the life-giving power of water, despite the fact that it’s also taken the life of many a sailor: “Let the living waters flow and bring the world to life. Trickle down the darkest cracks that never get the light. Weaving in and out of every creature on the Earth. Pull us all into the harmony that we’re created for.

This immediately segues into the 49-second-long interlude “What Blows Up (Must Come Down)“, a fantastic barrage of raging surf guitars. Like their previous album Liquid Exorcist, Dark Side of the Ocean contains several instrumental interludes that serve to connect the tracks and move the narrative forward. That interlude then becomes “Bottom of the Barrel“, a gnarly but melodic track sung from the perspective of the drowning sailor, whose soul is reborn into a magical undersea world: “Down at the bottom of the barrel. Still your love is bottomless. The weight of the world is crushing me to a pulp, but it brings my soul to the surface. If I make my bed in Mariana Trench, I’m welcomed to a city that’s lit. Bioluminescence.” The cool video was directed by Shipp’s wife Joy Soleil.

Though Rusty Shipp is not a Christian band per se, Shipp is up-front about his faith, as is evident in many of his lyrics. The 36-second-long track “The Bloop“, which serves as an introductory piece for “Tanninim“, a song about undiscovered sea monsters, includes spoken lines of scripture from Genesis, interspersed with Shipp’s own lyrics: “Let the waters bring forth abundantly the moving creature that hath life. And God created great Tanninim and every living creature that moveth. Which the waters brought forth abundantly after their kind. And God saw that it was good, saying, ‘Be fruitful and multiply, and fill the waters in the seas’.” “Tanninim” has a wonderfully eerie vibe, highlighted by a bold reggae beat driven by Newton’s brilliant drumming, and accompanied by Shipp’s spooky vocals that sound like he’s singing while underwater.

On the hard-driving grungy rocker “What’s Kracken?“, Shipp uses the mythical sea monster Kracken as a metaphor for the truth in a divided political environment where what constitutes the truth is often elusive and up for debate: “A tentacle washed up on shore. The TV says there’s something more ‘Was it just a giant squid or evidence of Leviathan?’ Can anybody out there say ‘What’s Kraken?‘” 

One of the many things I love about this album is how every track sounds uniquely different, with a wide variety of music styles and genres represented. “Fish in the Sea” is in the style of a sea shanty, a traditional work song once commonly sung aboard large merchant sailing ships, while “Angel Aquarium” fuses ska with frantic guitar-driven rock. “DESCENT” ends with “Bioluminescence“, a brief hauntingly beautiful piano ballad reprising the chorus from “Bottom of the Barrel”.

Opening the “ASCENT” half of the album is “King of the Deep“, a funereal-sounding sea shanty that’s one of the most powerful tracks on the album, and also one of my favorites. With verses alternately sung by sailors, angels and Poseidon, the song seems to be an ode to Poseidon himself. I like how the vocals and instrumentals are presented differently for each: the sailors’ are delivered with deep, baritone vocals accompanied by pounding drumbeats and fuzz-coated gnarly guitars, while the angels sound…well, angelic, with Shipp’s near-falsetto front and center, accompanied by lovely synths and delicate guitar notes. And as Poseidon, Shipp’s vocals are more commanding, of course. The song ends in a dramatic chorus of all three entities singing in glorious harmony.

Man Myth Legend” is a roiling punk rock gem fueled by marvelous psychedelia-tinged surf guitars. Man, this band knows how to rock! The lyrics speak to looking beyond our pre-conceived notions about people, keeping us locked in eternal conflict, and instead try to see them as humans not all that different from ourselves: “Tradition tries to demonize what we don’t understand. We need to see them through the love that covers all our skins. Until we’re dining in their homes, these men will be as good as myths and legends. They say the issue’s black and white, but aren’t we all just different shades of gray? If it makes us black and blue, then we’re going the wrong way. But we could bring in an age of peace, joining both our worlds into one. We could be the heroes that make a new end to the legend.

Each of Rusty Shipp’s three albums includes a cover of a classic rock song by a famous band. Their first album Mortal Ghost featured the Beatles song “Helter Skelter”, Liquid Exorcist featured Audioslave’s “Show Me How to Live”, and now Dark Side of the Ocean includes Pink Floyd’s “Us and Them“, from their 1973 masterpiece Dark Side of the Moon. While honoring the song’s compelling melody, Rusty Shipp’s version shaves a little over four minutes off the original, and gives it a harder rock treatment, with a bold mix of jangly and gnarly guitars and more emphatic vocals. The lyrics speak to the stupidity of war: “Us and them. And after all we’re all just ordinary men. Me and you. God only knows, it’s not what we would choose to do. Forward he cried from the rear. And the front rank died. The general sat and the lines on the map moved side to side. Black and blue. And who knows which is which and who is who? Up and down. And in the end we’re spinning round ‘n round.

The darkly beautiful instrumental interlude “Waking Braves” is a playful reimagining of their song “Breaking Waves” from Liquid Exorcist. This is followed by the grungy “Untouchable“, a terrific Nirvana-esque song about a soul with eternal life, free from earthly worries: “I am untouchable ‘cause nothing in this world can touch my soul. I am unconditionally loved, more than my heart could ever hold. I am a part of a plan where I am taken care of forever. I have eternal life, so tell me what is left to fear?” The grungy rock vibes continue on the raucous minute and a half long instrumental interlude “Up the Waterspout“.

The album closes with “The Other Side“, where so many of the elements that make Dark Side of the Ocean such a great album come together into a grand finale. The songs starts off as a slow acoustic ballad, then erupts into a celebratory feast of rousing surf guitars and frenetic ska grooves. The lyrics speak to what I think of as my own definition of Heaven, which is not some magical ‘perfect’ place in the clouds, but rather a sense of happiness and contentment that exists as a state of mind: “People always look for Heaven in the wrong places as if it’s just somewhere you go on retirement vacation. But a wise man once said that the Kingdom of Heaven is within; try looking there and let me know when you find it. We’re going on a search for the real Heaven. A Heaven we don’t have to wait for till our lives are through. We’re finding out the real meaning of salvation, and finding out it’s better than anything we thought we knew.”

I’m not sure what more I can say about Dark Side of the Ocean, other than to reiterate how marvelous it is. Not only are its concept and storyline brilliantly executed, it’s sounds damn good too! The musicians and sound engineers involved in the album’s recording and production did a masterful job, and the result is a work that’s flawlessly arranged and beautifully crafted on every level. Finally, a great deal of credit must go to Russ Shipp’s incredible vision, imagination and talents, both as a songwriter and vocalist.

Connect with Rusty Shipp: Website / Facebook / Twitter / Instagram
Stream their music: SpotifyApple Music / SoundclouddeezerYouTube
Purchase on Bandcamp 

RUSTY SHIPP – Album Review: “Liquid Exorcist”

Rusty Ship Liquid Exorcist

One of my favorites of the many artists and bands I’ve featured on this blog is Nashville four-piece Rusty Shipp. (You can read my reviews by clicking on the links under “Related” at the bottom of this page.) The brain child of front man Russ T. Shipp (his honest to God real birth name), Rusty Shipp is a self-described “Nautical Rock’n’Roll” band, with a sound influenced by ‘the melodic chord progressions of The Beatles, the surf guitar of Dick Dale, the grunge rock of Nirvana, and the heavy metal of Led Zeppelin’, among others. Their music is characterized by a dark, immersive sound, high-octane riffs and haunting vocals. Like many bands, they’ve experienced changes in lineup since forming in 2014, and now consist of the aforementioned Russ T. Shipp on guitar and vocals, Elijah Apperson on lead guitar, AJ Newton on drums and Andrew “Speedy” Speed on bass. Together, they’re an immensely talented group of musicians who truly know how to deliver the hard rock goods.

Rusty Shipp

Following up on their phenomenal and highly-acclaimed 2017 album Mortal Ghost, Rusty Shipp has put out a new album Liquid Exorcist, which dropped on November 7th. In keeping with their nautical theme, it’s a concept work built around the subject of sea mine terrorism. It also plays somewhat like a rock opera, with one song seamlessly transitioning into the next without skipping a beat. Liquid Exorcist has a relatively short run time of only 26 minutes, exactly half that of Mortal Ghost, as several of the tracks are transitional or connectors between longer tracks. Nevertheless, it still makes an incredibly powerful statement and packs quite a wallop in it’s relatively short run time. Also, whereas Mortal Ghost has a heavier grunge feel, Liquid Exorcist sounds more melodic, sweeping and epic. The first time I listened to it all the way through, I was blown away.

It opens with the 42-second-long “Mine Factory“, an ominous-sounding instrumental intro that builds into a frantic barrage of gnarly riffs and smashing drumbeats as it immediately segues into “Liquid Pendulum“, a fantastic song with blistering guitars and intense, hard-driving rhythms that ebb and flow like waves on a stormy sea. Apperson and Shipp’s intricate guitar work is terrific, and Newton’s power drums provide just the right amount of propulsive thrust. Shipp has a beautiful singing voice that registers in the mid-range, occasionally rising to a just shy of a falsetto. The biting lyrics are a denunciation of the terrible legacy of countries filling the oceans with explosive mines: “Aren’t your wars waged on land enough? Why don’t you just keep your mankind to yourself? Leave behind your mess for someone else. Sharks will gladly come to your help.”

The track transitions into “Mindsweeper” a dark instrumental with chugging, distorted riffs, throbbing bass and harsh industrial synths. Then, watery plucked guitar strings and Speedy’s pulsating bass riff announce the arrival of “Detonator“. Suddenly, the music explodes into an electrifying maelstrom of swirling, fuzzy and wailing guitars, driving bass and thunderous percussion. It’s a spectacular song.

Rusty Shipp is not a Christian band per se, though Shipp is up-front about his Christian faith, as is evident in lyrics like “Raptured from the shrapnel in the twinkling of an eye. Jesus wasn’t kidding when he said the end was near.” Overall, the lyrics address the dangerous work of those attempting to dismantle sea mines: “Disconnect the wires, before we all expire, but the water is turning into fire now. Everybody down, the bombs have stopped their ticking sound, five seconds till Heaven’s all around.

SS Naronic (Reprise)” is a ghostly revisit of the original track featured on Mortal Ghost, chronicling the White Star Line ship lost at sea in the north Atlantic in February 11, 1893, along with all its 74 passengers on board. To echoed, underwater sounds, Shipp’s electronically altered vocals lament “O God, please tell me there is more than this. That this cold abyss is not the end. Tell me it’s more than an accident, a warning to teach a lesson. Show me how it’s all part of the plan.”

Rusty Shipp then pays homage to Audioslave with a well-executed cover of “Show Me How to Live“, doing great justice to the powerful classic.  Once again, there’s a religious reference with the lyric “Nail in my hand from my Creator. You gave me life now show me how to live.”  Though different from Chris Cornell’s, Shipp’s vocals are just as effective in conveying the raw passion expressed in the lyrics. That segues into the face-melting and aptly-titled instrumental interlude “Blow Your Mine“. This intense, minute-long track perfectly showcases the band’s impressive skills.

Hundred Crosses” is, I think, the most beautiful song on the album, with a dramatic, sweeping melody that switches from calm to exuberant and back again, making for a very exciting listen. The multi-textured guitars are sublime, accompanied by Newton’s snappy drums and wildly crashing cymbals, all working in tandem to create a glorious soundscape for Shipp’s soaring vocals. Next up is “Breaking Waves“, the first single released in advance of the album last July, which I featured on this blog. It has a dark but catchy melody, with layered riffs of gnarly and distorted guitars, throbbing bass and pounding drums. Shipp explained that the song “describes the battle between technology and nature in a tortoise-and-the-hare-like metaphor, where mankind’s mightiest technology won’t stand a chance in the long run against the simple, steady erosion of the ocean’s immortal waves (i.e, nature) breaking it down.” 

Liquid Exorcist closes with another religious nod on the nautical poem “Navy Hymn“.  “Eternal Father, strong to save. Whose arm doth bind the restless wave. Who bidd’st the mighty ocean deep. Its own appointed limits keep. O, hear us when we cry to Thee. For those in peril on the sea.” The brief track features stirring a capella choir vocals, accompanied only by sounds of the sea, and it’s a fitting end to the album.

Folks, this is a stunning and masterfully-crafted record on every level. Given it’s relatively brief run time and riveting listening experience, it seems to end far too quickly. That’s a good thing, and certainly preferable to some albums that overstay their welcome with too many filler tracks. Rusty Shipp continue to impress me with their incredible songwriting and musicianship, and deserve to be huge.

Connect with Rusty Shipp: Website / Facebook / Twitter / Instagram
Stream their music: Spotify / Soundcloud / Reverbnation / YouTube
Purchase: iTunes / cdbaby / Bandcamp