Frigid Stars

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (36 ratings)
Frigid Stars album cover
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 41:38

eMusic Review 0

Avatar Image
Andy Battaglia

eMusic Contributor

Andy Battaglia writes about music and culture of various other kinds from a home base in New York. His work has appeared in the Wall Street Journal, the Wire, t...more »

03.15.10
The origins of slowcore in one tidy package
Label: Sub Pop Records

Codeine's epochal album Frigid Stars opens by issuing itself a glum grade ("D for effort / D for intent," in opening track "D") and then grows evermore glum with every crashing and crumbling chord. Such was the fashion for slowcore, which Codeine helped establish in the '90s as a sound given to patience and self-abnegation, and such is definitely the fashion for an album whose skewed idea of a love song opens "Last night I dreamt your face / the skin was falling off" (these lines from "Cave-In," which really does scan as a cryptic zombie love song). But all of that might make the devotions of Codeine sound darker and more belligerent than they really are. The reality is closer to the kind of haunted lilt favored by bands like Slint and Seam, in which every rock and post-rock gesture — each ring of spacious guitar, thrum of bass or splash of a drum cymbal — happens and then just hangs there, in the service of distended drama. Sometimes that drama can be pretty ("New Year's") or pent-up ("Cigarette Machine") or just plain mysterious ("Second Chance"). But it's always unwaveringly, unerringly dramatic — in a way that works as… read more »

Write a Review 0 Member Reviews

Please register before you review a release. Register

Recommended Albums

They Say All Music Guide

The cover of Frigid Stars sets the mood well — a negative black and white shot of some stars, looking even more haunting as a result. As for the album, the tone isn’t simply being cold or unemotional, but simply gripped by a deep black mood, where everything seems on the verge of suddenly going wrong or collapsing. There’s actually a cryptic warmth in the slow tempos and feedback produced from the deliberate strumming and chords from John Engle and Chris Brokaw’s guitars. It isn’t the narcotic hush of Low — there’s actually a little more relative energy than that! — or sludgy stoner rock à la Black Sabbath, but something else entirely. Bassist Stephen Immerwahr’s vocals lend to that feeling, softly ruminative, sometimes straining, but never sounding self-important or whining (though sometimes the lyrics are creepily macabre — check out the start of “Cave-In”). If one lets oneself go for the album’s general feel, then it all flows together to make a touching, surprising experience, but those seeking variety aren’t likely to be happy. It avoids sounding repetitious by virtue of the dynamics — treat the entire album as an extended mood piece, and it works well. Engle’s lead guitar work throws in enough heartbreakingly strong moments to help — the sudden low swoop on “Pickup Song” is a standout, while the dark, forbidding drones on “Second Chance” are truly chilling. An interesting cover surfaces a few songs in — “New Year’s” (co-written by Bitch Magnet singer Sooyoung Park but not recorded by him until the first Seam album, Headsparks, two years later). Codeine here sound a touch cleaner than elsewhere on Frigid Stars, where the guitars can really sprawl when needed, but Brokaw’s drumming and Immerwahr’s great delivery mark it out as their version instead of merely a straightforward remake. – Ned Raggett

more »