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Eric Bass Unplugged… But Still Plugged In

Out of the Shadows, Into the Spotlight: Shinedown’s Eric Bass Trades Basslines for Battle Cries in a Solo Record Fueled by Faith, Fiction, and Fierce Self Expression.
May 21st, 2025
For Eric Bass, the leap from playing sold out arenas with Shinedown to releasing a deeply personal solo album I Had a Name wasn’t a departure, it was an extension of his artistic voice. “There’s really not a lot of difference,” he shared. “I write from the same place, with intent and honesty.” Though the project bore only his name, it was far from a solitary effort in spirit. His bandmates, he explained, were not only aware of his solo endeavor but actively encouraged him, pushing him to release the record even when he doubted its readiness.
That inner dialogue, one without the usual sounding boards, proved both liberating and daunting. “You don’t have anyone to bounce ideas off of,” Eric admitted. “You’re the only judge. It’s a blessing and a curse.” Still, the process gave him room to push boundaries and explore stories in a new way, including the development of the haunting character Azalea, a former religious sect member turned assassin. Her journey mirrors his own spiritual grappling: “I’ve dealt in the past with a crisis of faith. Realizing that removing all spirituality left life pretty hollow… She starts to welcome some of that back, and so have I.”
The seeds for the project took root unexpectedly in a Milan hotel room when a voice, not his own, told him, “You might want to write this down.” That moment sparked a flood of creativity and birthed what would become an entire fictional world. Initially intended as an origin story, the narrative soon grew, pulling in new characters and darker conflicts. Azalea’s internal struggle became just one part of a much larger cinematic universe, one that Eric sees in motion, not static panels. “I always see it in fluid motion,” he explained. “It’s very cinematic in my head, whether animated or live action.”
That cinematic instinct bleeds into the music. Tracks like “Mind Control” and “New Gods of War” may spring from this imagined dystopia, but they land firmly in today’s world. Yet Eric insists any political interpretations are coincidental. “I started writing before the world felt like it slid into dystopia. But then reality started to parallel the fiction too closely, and I had to stop for a while.” Ultimately, what emerged was less a commentary on society and more a personal reckoning, an emotional landscape where darkness represented depression and the villain Davar became the embodiment of that mental weight. “It’s really a very insular story,” he reflected. “It’s about what goes on inside my brain.”
This internal focus never loses sight of the listener. For Eric, music’s power lies in its ability to reach the individual, especially those battling their own inner demons. “I hope fans see themselves in these characters,” he said. “Music is there to heal, no matter who you are. Take what you need and use it to take another step forward in life.”
The soundscape supporting that message draws from an eclectic range of influences. While writing, Eric avoided listening to other music entirely, preferring to draw from long standing inspirations—everything from Van Halen and Deftones to the Beastie Boys and even Broadway musicals. His upbringing was steeped in show tunes courtesy of his mom, and that theatricality surfaces in his approach. “I just wanted to pull out stuff that gave me the fizz,” he said with a grin. “Something that made me feel excited.”
Some songs arrived in full, start to finish, while others evolved over months, shaped more like orchestral compositions than traditional rock tracks. The goal was always to push boundaries. “What’s something different that could happen here?” he’d ask himself. “I just tried to be true to myself, even if that meant getting a little uncomfortable.”
Of course, such vulnerability doesn’t come without self-doubt. “Tons of moments where I thought, ‘What did I get myself into?’” he confessed. “But if you’re doing something real, something you care about, you’re going to feel like a fraud one minute and a hero the next. That’s how you know you’re doing it right.”
And how did his Shinedown brothers react to hearing it? “Zach had an immediate emotional response, he really loved it,” Eric recalled. “Others took time, and some didn’t get it at all. But they’ve all been wildly encouraging.” One idea even floated around about performing one of the tracks during a Shinedown show, a quiet nod of support from the band that speaks volumes.
The tracklist, full of titles like “Dead Inside” and “The Churches of the Dying,” offers little in the way of levity, but it wasn’t darkness for darkness’ sake. “It was hugely cathartic,” Eric said. “You can’t have absolute light without absolute dark. I wanted to write about that low place so that when we arrive at victory, it means something.”
And while he originally ruled out any live performances of the solo material, that door isn’t entirely closed. “Enough people have asked that I’ve started thinking about it,” he said. A theatrical tour around the release of the accompanying graphic novel might be on the table—complete with an all-star band and full visual spectacle. “I’ve always had an instrument on stage. It would be liberating to just hold a mic and really lean into that frontman role.”
As his voice fades and the screen closes, one thing becomes clear: whether through Shinedown, his solo work, or the dark corridors of a graphic novel world, Eric Bass remains devoted to the power of storytelling—one where pain and triumph walk hand in hand, and where music never stops being a source of healing.
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