Adam Rubenstein
Adam Rubenstein has spent decades building a life in music that rarely sits still. From his early work in Midwest hardcore pioneers Split Lip to the long arc of Chamberlain, his voice has been shaped by movement, reinvention, and a refusal to stay pinned to one version of himself for too long. But for the better part of the last decade, that forward motion looked different.
While Chamberlain carried the weight of his rock and roll output (the band’s 2019 album Red Weather was its first in 21 years), Rubenstein’s solo work quietly accumulated in the background. Songs stacked up over years spent writing, composing, and raising a family. The idea of making another solo record lingered, but never quite broke through until a sudden move from New York City to Cincinnati forced a reset.
What began as a reluctant departure turned into something else entirely. A new environment, a new pace, and just enough distance from the life he had known for two decades created the environment to finally confront the body of work he had been carrying. The result is Firebreak, his first solo album since 2016’s Nightly Waves.
Initial sessions in New York captured a live band energy alongside a trusted group of collaborators such as drummer Pete Wilhoit (Fiction Plane), multi-instrumentalist Matt Beck (Matchbox Twenty), and bassist Jeremy Nesse, grounding the songs in immediacy and instinct. From there, Rubenstein completed the album in a basement studio in Cincinnati, working alone to shape the final details. That tension between collective performance and solitary reflection runs throughout the record, giving Firebreak a sense of movement that feels both deliberate and unguarded.
“The best part about playing with other musicians is being able to bounce ideas off of one another. So finishing up these songs, especially recording vocals on my own, was a challenge for me. Self-doubt definitely starts to creep in without the approval of cheerleaders in the room,” says Rubenstein
At its core, Firebreak is about change and the uneasy process of learning how to live inside it. Fatherhood, relocation, creative identity, the gloomy state of the world, the passage of time and Rubenstein’s renewed connection to his cousin, late Bar-Kays keyboardist Ronnie Caldwell, all surface in different forms, but the throughline is clear. These songs were not written in a single burst of inspiration. They were lived with, carried, and eventually released.
There are familiar voices woven into the album which trace Rubenstein’s arc from pre-teen Indianapolis guitar wiz to a key architect of the evolution of post-hardcore into something more melodic and satisfying. Living Colour’s Vernon Reid, whom Rubenstein has studied since the late ‘80s, shreds on “Don’t Mean Much,” while former Into Another vocalist Richie Birkenhead reps for the ex-hardcore kids who’ve traded their skate shoes for station wagons and middle age on “To Be Here.” Elsewhere, Dashboard Confessional’s Chris Carrabba harmonizes on “Choosing Sides,” highlighting Split Lip and Chamberlain’s influence over the next generation of singer/songwriters.
“Although Firebreak is primarily a solo effort, it feels a bit like scoring a new film, where I feel extremely lucky to have so many incredible co-conspirators,” admits Rubenstein, who had the chance to play with Reid, bass virtuoso MonoNeon and lone surviving Bar-Kays member James Alexander for his forthcoming movie Soul Sound ‘67 about the former’s band. “Frankly it’s flattering that musicians I respect so much take an interest in my songs in the first place.”
Behind the board, longtime collaborator Derik Lee brings a steady hand shaped by work across Broadway and film, including Hamilton. Together, they help frame a record that feels expansive without losing its center.
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