Shipping News
Save Everything


4.0
excellent

Review

by geng USER (3 Reviews)
November 4th, 2011 | 14 replies


Release Date: 1997 | Tracklist

Review Summary: The best album you've never heard.

It's so frequently something of a disappointment when former band members embark on a new project. It's not that, for example, The Mars Volta and Queens of the Stone Age aren't great bands, they're just not as good (in my opinion, at least) as At the Drive-In or Kyuss respectively. So it's always pleasing when a band gets a second bite at the cherry and doesn't disappoint.

Born from the ashes of Louisville post/math-rock band Rodan, Shipping News' 1997 debut 'Save Everything' sounds, in many respects, just as one might expect it to sound. A closer look, however, shows that this is more than just Rodan mk II.

Let's just get this out of the way first, though. It is impossible to listen to 'Save Everything' without being reminded either of Rodan's solitary LP 'Rusty' or, of course, Slint's 'Spiderland'. The marriage of a garage-rock guitar sound with a loose song structure and odd time-signatures, along with the arpeggiated build-ups that have defined post-rock, help form the sound of this album. But while the strengths of its illustrious forbears lied largely in finding beauty in dissonance, the finest moments on 'Save Everything' come when the band takes a somewhat more melodic route. In perhaps the standout track, the enchanting use of natural harmonics on 'All By Electricity' makes the guitar sound like a a twinkling star, underpinned by a wonderfully complementing bass line and the sparsest of drum beats. Another highlight is ten-minute album closer 'A True Lover's Knot', the second movement of which is a hypnotic intertwining of guitar, bass and drums. Don't worry though, it's not all sunshine and flowers, as the track reaches its climax in a math-rock maelstrom of clashing strings and cymbals.

At just under 40 minutes, 'Save Everything' does very well not to outstay its welcome, something which can happen all too easily within the genre. While it might not quite be the most unique or influential album that was released in the great decade that was the 1990s, it's certainly a criminally overlooked piece of work that deserves far more attention, and is very much worth hearing.


user ratings (45)
3.9
excellent


Comments:Add a Comment 
geng
November 4th 2011


1986 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

First review in a long time, so some feedback would be great

WeepingBanana
November 4th 2011


11387 Comments


album is so awesome. glad someone reviewed it

SowerKraut
November 5th 2011


236 Comments


Yeah weird I just got this recently and then somebody reviews it. review is good, but I don't understand your rating of a 4 with a summary like that

Spare
November 5th 2011


5567 Comments


wish people would quit it with these dumb assumptions

geng
November 5th 2011


1986 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

I admit the summary is a little bit hyperbolic, I just thought it was attention-grabbing. It's one of those albums that will probably go up to 4.5 after I've listened to it a few more times.

scissorlocked
November 5th 2011


3538 Comments


the band is mostly unknown

they 're pretty good though

Adash
November 5th 2011


1355 Comments


Sucked back down the Sputnik spiral, good times. I'll give this a spin after I listen to Rusty properly.

Spare
November 5th 2011


5567 Comments


flies the fields is better btw everyoen gyys

JJmcJizzle
November 5th 2011


100 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

Flies the fields is better but this is still pretty damn good.

WeepingBanana
May 11th 2012


11387 Comments


album rockz

WeepingBanana
December 29th 2013


11387 Comments


5'd

WeepingBanana
July 26th 2014


11387 Comments


this is better than flies

GhandhiLion
June 25th 2017


17641 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

sweet

GhandhiLion
June 25th 2017


17641 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

" At a Venture" Is fantastic.



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