Home Read Albums Of The Week: Rich Ruth | I Survived, It’s Over

Albums Of The Week: Rich Ruth | I Survived, It’s Over

Put on your headphones for the Nashville artist's latest immersive outing — which fearlessy meanders between psychedelia, jazz, ambient and whatever else he likes.

THE EDITED PRESS RELEASE:Rich Ruth — aka veteran Nashville musician Michael Ruth — took a break from touring with various bands in 2018 and dedicated himself to composing ambient music in his small home studio, focusing on the diverse traditions of ambient, new age, spiritual jazz, Kosmiche, and minimalist music. His ideas became fully realized with the inclusion of additional players, pairing his repetitive, droning synthesizer movements with spur-of-the-moment improvisation to transform the material into something much more lush and unpredictable.

One summer morning, Ruth was held up at gunpoint and carjacked by two people outside of his home. His music allowed him to work through this personal struggle, infusing his 2019 debut album Calming Signals, with striking layers of angst and emotion. Where There’s Life followed in 2021, a collection of meditative pieces written in the early months of the pandemic manifesting the collective sense of uncertainty and solitude of the time.

Recorded in 2020 in the midst of the pandemic and in the wake of a series of tornadoes that wreaked havoc upon his North Nashville neighborhood, I Survived, It’s Over sees Ruth pushing his music even further into heretofore untapped sonic and emotional terrain. Melding inventive sound exploration, complex instrumentation — from shredding guitars and swelling strings to flutes, saxophones, pedal steel, and more — and a transcendent passion for nature, Ruth has created a milestone work of organic, symphonic power, a deeply affirmative musical movement that transforms the unease and sorrow of this difficult era into something strong and true and beautiful.

I Survived, It’s Over is a meditation on healing, confronting trauma, surrendering, and finding peace,” Ruth says. “I constantly experiment with sound until it reflects the way I am feeling and attempt to sculpt something meaningful from it.”

Previous articleAlbums Of the Week: Reckling | Human Nature EP
Next articleAlbums of The Week: Waax | At Least I’m Free