The Five Ghosts

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The Five Ghosts album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 39:09

eMusic Review 0

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Barry Walters

eMusic Contributor

06.21.10
A poppy account of love, death and the spectral forces that move between
2010 | Label: Vagrant Records (US)

Over the course of 2009, Torquil Campbell of Stars — one of several acts in the orbit of Toronto indie-rock collective Broken Social Scene — became a dad and lost his own. During that same time, keyboardist Chris Seligman moved into and promptly out of a Vancouver apartment he felt certain was haunted by a female spirit that wanted him dead. These fateful occurrences transformed the fifth disc from this beguiling quintet into a concept album dedicated to love, death and the spectral forces that move between.

Under those circumstances, there's no way that The Five Ghosts could be a happy, conventional record. Stars simply don't make them. But in contrast to 2007's In Our Bedroom after the War, a disc closer to the bombast of their countrymen in Arcade Fire than their usual Anglo musical sources (namely, the Smiths and their fellow Northerners in Prefab Sprout), The Five Ghosts is a poppier work. "I Died So I Could Haunt You" ranks among the catchiest tunes in the Stars catalog and "We Don't Want Your Body" follows harpsichord-like sounds with quasi-funk syncopation. Keyboards take precedence over guitars; drum machines return. Veteran big-time mixer Michael H. Brauer hones… read more »

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i love the "re-purchase"

redbecca

emusic, I've hung with you for a lot of changes, but this losing labels, getting labels back and then making people pay twice gives "buying" from you a bad name.

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Never heard of 'em...

ThePocketThug

...but they're Awesome! Every song gets better with each listen. My morning commute is just long enough to listen through the whole album, and when I do, it stays with me all day.

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Stars return to electropop...

dcwizard

...with great effect, turning in one of the most consistently good indie pop albums of the year.

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Stars.....

MichaelJay

Never heard of them. Same with me..After sampling the CD and having some credits to use I tried it out. Wow! What a surprise I got. this is one of those sleeper CD's that kinda grows on you. I started out loving "I Died So I Could Hate You" and graduated from there. This is a good CD folks and it still keeps getting better. Try it, You'll like it. Try just one track and go from there. You'll be a believer in no time.

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Better Than Expected

GDusk

I have always been lukewarm to Star' previous albums. The Five Ghosts finds them moving in a slightly different direction and piggybacking on the recent breakthrough success of fellow Canadians Metric. But the songs retain powerful hooks and infectious songs. Check out "Wasted Daylight" and if you do not fall for that track, skip this album.

user avatar

boooo-rring

Stick-Up-Artist

I just can't get excited about this record. I love this band... I mean "Set Yourself on Fire" was probably my favorite album of all of the 2000's... but this is just not catching me.

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They have done Better

Calthus

This is a decent Stars album if you are a fan, but get Set Yourself on Fire if you are looking for a first to buy.

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their best

ThePerennialStudent

I've liked a few Stars songs, but I haven't liked a Stars album. This one, I love.

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bad

Arnold

Have to agree with pitchfork on this one. It's a bad album. Though where they blame the production, I just don't think there are any fresh musical ideas here. The verses in "Wasted Daylight" are pretty good, but then the chorus starts up and it's like, oh, we're doing Sarah McLachlan now. "I Died So I Could Haunt You" is an embarrassingly bad song. I downloaded only the first 8 tracks, so if the last 3 are great, my apologies. I'll still be listening to SYOF years from now.

user avatar

Stars are…

Moody834

…pop perfection. Pitch perfect. Dead on. In the same way that The Smiths nailed "that feeling", transcending their genre and redefining it for others to follow, Stars have here set the bar for everyone else. Sweet, elegiac, resonating with emotions that tug and push and dance. This is a brilliant album, the kind you'll recall years from now as having been there for you.

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