Album info

Album-Release:
2022

HRA-Release:
15.04.2022

Label: Mascot Records

Genre: Rock

Subgenre: Hard Rock

Artist: Shaman's Harvest

Album including Album cover

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Formats & Prices

FormatPriceIn CartBuy
FLAC 48 $ 13.20
  • 1Under Your Skin03:23
  • 2Toe the Line03:52
  • 3Flatline03:26
  • 4Voices04:00
  • 5Wildfire03:49
  • 6Lilith03:52
  • 7Mama02:44
  • 8Hurricane04:21
  • 9Pretty People03:12
  • 10Wishing Well03:42
  • 11Bird Dog04:28
  • Total Runtime40:49

Info for Rebelator



"This was the hardest record we've ever made, on every level," says Nathan Hunt, referring to Shaman's Harvest's seventh album.

The storyline seems obvious: The Missouri hard-rockers assembled this project during a global pandemic that debilitated the entire music industry. "Hard" has kind of been universal lately. But the road to Rebelator was even rockier than the band expected.

After a couple gruelling years of touring behind their last album, 2017's Red Hands Black Deeds, the band were creatively and personally drained. The quartet—Hunt, guitarists Josh Hamler and Derrick Shipp, drummer Adam Zemanek—hit the reset button hard, clearing out six months for demo construction at their Jefferson City rehearsal space.

The last two albums were hits with a combined 190 million streams between them. So, the band wanted a focus - the new album. The process was fairly haphazard at first, as they tried to regain their footing. With everyone on-hand, they'd all wake up and try to churn up ideas—though it was slow going for a bit. "We'd just sit there and noodle until the spark [was lit]," Hunt admits.

An early breakthrough was "Wishing Well," a signature rocker that pairs a detuned metal chug with a twangy, soaring chorus and subtle, yet eyebrow-raising, flourishes like fingerpicked acoustic guitar and experimental vocal effects. The ideas just kept flowing from there, encouraged by producer Kile Odell, who joined them for a month.

In keeping with the spirit of those last three albums, the band aimed to, in Hunt's words, "de-genre-fy" their music—aiming beyond the contemporary rock-metal formula to add sublet arrangement quirks.

Shaman's Harvest persevered and wound up with their richest, most well-rounded album to date – to say it is a triumph, for the band, would be an understatement.

Nathan Hunt, vocals
Josh Hamler, guitar
Derrick Shipp, guitar
Adam Zemanek, drums
Matt Fisher, bass



Shaman's Harvest
is a rock band from Jefferson City, Missouri. Bassist Matt Fisher, singer Nathan "Drake" Hunt and guitarist Josh Hamler founded the band in 1996. Ryan Tomlinson joined the band on lead guitar for their 2009 album Shine. Shaman's Harvest released their fifth full-length album titled Smokin' Hearts & Broken Guns on September 16, 2014. This release marked the band's debut on Mascot Records, a Mascot Label Group sub-label.

The band released three albums in their early years: Last Call for Goose Creek (1999), Synergy (2002) and March of the Bastards (2006). In 2009, the single "Dragonfly" reached #16 on Billboard's Active Rock chart, #9 at Heritage Rock, and #34 on Billboard's Rock Songs chart. The single sold over 130,000 copies and the album sold 33,000+ copies. The song appeared on the soundtrack of the motion picture Legendary.

In early 2010 Shaman's Harvest recorded "Broken Dreams" as the theme song for wrestler Drew McIntyre of the WWE. They continued that relationship, supplying "End of Days" as the entrance track for Wade Barrett and The Corre. Their song "Anger" appears in the feature film No One Lives.

During the recording of their album Smokin' Hearts & Broken Guns, Hunt was diagnosed with throat cancer, and he received treatment during the recording of the album. Lead guitarist Ryan Tomlinson left the group in September 2014 to concentrate on his band Driving Wheel and the new country act Murphy's Ford. He was replaced by guitarist Derrick Shipp for the tour supporting Smokin' Hearts & Broken Guns. Drummer Joe 'Baggins' Harrington also joined the band during this period.

This album contains no booklet.

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