Review
Chris Wollard & The Ship Thieves
Chris Wollard & The Ship Thieves

No Idea (2009) Bob

Chris Wollard & The Ship Thieves – Chris Wollard & The Ship Thieves cover artwork
Chris Wollard & The Ship Thieves – Chris Wollard & The Ship Thieves — No Idea, 2009

Over the course of a period of time, Chris Wollard (of Hot Water Music, The Draft, Blacktop Cadence, and Rumbleseat fame) and a gaggle of friends (George Rebelo of Hot Water Music sits in on drums on some tracks) recorded a batch of songs composed by Wollard that were basically front porch jams that got fleshed out into more realized songs. This album is the culmination of those hanging out and jamming on guitars sessions, and Wollard and the boys give them to listeners after deciding that they had fun with the songs. In all honesty, the concept behind the Ship Thieves is intriguing, some of Wollard's previous material could easily be envisioned as such as found on this album; but in some respects, this album is shocking.

Right from the start with straight up pop musings of "No Exception," the tuneful compositions come through like nothing else that Wollard has previously produced but kind of heard hiding underneath the crazy punk rock of Hot Water Music or the raw acoustic sounds of Rumbleseat. There is definitely a sense of familiarity in these songs with what sound like aural shadows of his previous work. And while the music is full of variation (the country inflections of "Reason in My Rhyme" and "You Always Leave" are nicely executed while "Oh, Whatever" is just a damn good song), Wollard's vocal performance seemingly provides the glue for the collection. The group of people that participate on this record definitely all put in top notch performances for each one of the tracks, which definitely lends a nice touch to every note and every noise that pours through the speakers. "In The Middle of the Sea" is one of my personal favorite pieces on the album (imagine if Micah P. Hinson wrote an acoustic song with Hot Water Music and then got Mark Lanegan to do background vocals); it is just a simple song, but somehow, the track just hits all the right notes.

Chris Wollard, along with the Ship Thieves, turns in an excellent batch of songs for this album. The smooth sounds are equally reminiscent of other projects of which Wollard is a part and completely fresh sounding, and these seemingly simultaneous qualities are what make this record so endearing on its own. And while I may personally pine for a new Hot Water Music and The Draft album, this album definitely stands on its own merits. Thankfully Chris Wollard is neither close-minded nor afraid to explore other sounds in his music, and as a result this record is quite good.

7.5 / 10Bob • September 30, 2009

Chris Wollard & The Ship Thieves – Chris Wollard & The Ship Thieves cover artwork
Chris Wollard & The Ship Thieves – Chris Wollard & The Ship Thieves — No Idea, 2009

Related news

New Ship Thieves in March

Posted in Records on February 5, 2021

A new split between Ship Thieves and Reconciler

Posted in Records on January 13, 2021

Ship Thieves Premiere New Track From 'No Anchor'

Posted in Records on January 27, 2016

Recently-posted album reviews

The Phase Problem

The Power Of Positive Thinking
Brassneck Records (2024)

I spent a good part of the late ‘90s annoyed at the abundance of Ramonescore. I’ll stand by my word: many of the bands of that era were carbon copies that didn’t bring anything new to the format. But time has passed and what was overdone is now a refreshing change of pace. For whatever reason, when I hear a … Read more

Totally Slow

The Darkness Intercepts
Refresh Records (2024)

I find Totally Slow a hard band to categorize. Their brand of melodic, hard punk is familiar and comforting -- rooted in ‘80s hardcore, ‘90s skatepunk, and post-something guitar-driven rock. The press release namedrops Dag Nasty and Hot Snakes, among others, which I think are good starting points. But while it’s familiar, it’s absolutely not a carbon copy. Like their forebearers, the songs … Read more

Steamachine

City of Death
Records Workshop (2023)

City Of Death is the third album from Polish noise makers Steamachine. Having dabbled in a few metal styles over their career, City Of Death has a heavy carnival influence to it which I have to say I really like. It's interesting just how much more sinister things sound when you pump eerie, jingly circus sounds amongst very dark, heavy, … Read more