Ruston Kelly
The following description comes from the event organizer.
With his sophomore album Shape & Destroy, Nashville-based artist Ruston Kelly now documents his
experience in maintaining sobriety, and finally facing the demons that led him to drug abuse in the
first place. But while Kelly recounts that journey with an unvarnished honesty, his grace and
conviction as an artist ultimately turn Shape & Destroy into a work of unlikely transcendence.
With its unsparing reflection on what Kelly refers to as “the cycle of frustration and temptation after
getting clean,” Shape & Destroy took form during a period of painful transformation. “It wasn’t
surprising to me that getting sober was a challenge, but there were moments when it was challenging
in a way I’d never experienced before,” Kelly says. “There’s so much repair your brain has to
do—spiritually, emotionally, physically—and at one point I really felt like I was losing my mind.”
As a means of self-preservation and catharsis, Kelly eventually turned to the ritual of free writing, a
practice that led him to the album’s title. “This phrase just came to me one day: ‘Shape the life you
want by destroying what obstructs the soul,’” he recalls. “I realized that was the ticket to healing
myself and healing my mind: figuring out what kind of person I want to become, and then getting
rid of everything that keeps me from being that person.”