|

Click here to expand and collapse the player

Interstellar

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (69 ratings)
Interstellar album cover
01
Interstellar
3:28 $0.99
02
Know Me
2:52 $0.99
03
Gospel/Grace
3:02 $0.99
04
Daylight Sky
2:46 $0.99
05
Pair Of Wings
4:03 $0.99
06
Had We Had It
3:05 $0.99
07
Night Swim
2:34 $0.99
08
Apples For The Sun
4:04 $0.99
09
Moon In My Mind
3:09 $0.99
10
The Fall
3:27 $0.99
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 32:30

Find a problem with a track? Let us know.

eMusic Review 0

Avatar Image
Matthew Fritch

eMusic Contributor

Matthew Fritch spent more than a decade as senior editor of the Philadelphia-based magazine MAGNET, where he wrote about wildly unpopular indie rock bands and r...more »

02.21.12
Successfully moving her music out of the garage
2012 | Label: Slumberland Records / The Orchard

Frankie Rose spent the early part of her musical career as a member of a ragtag coven of Brooklyn retro-garage bands, including Vivian Girls, Crystal Stilts and Dum Dum Girls. Interstellar, her second solo album since moving on from those groups, shows exactly how to move your music out of the garage: Clean out all the grit and grease, put on some makeup, imagine yourself as a dragon’s teardrop on the moonscape of a Yes album cover, and blast off into a colder space. An appreciation for early-’80s new wave blankets Interstellar with a certain iciness – drum machines, oscillating keyboards, brittle-sounding guitars – but it’s not frozen solid. Rose’s voice unlocks these songs like a key; rather than apply the steely, remote effects given to so many electronic-pop vocalists, producer Le Chev (whose very name makes this album seem even more tilted toward the ’80s) keeps Rose’s voice at a tender, close distance. Though some fairy-dusted moments occur (such as the feather-light title track or the strange wood-sprite chanting on “The Fall”), this isn’t a Cocteau Twins record. Rose has pop songs to sing, from winning A-side “Know Me,” with its brisk Smiths rhythms, to the… read more »

Write a Review 5 Member Reviews

Please register before you review a release. Register

user avatar

a favorite

roxy

smooth, dark, and wonderful.

user avatar

Interstellar

EMUSIC-029C461F

Smooth and edgy all at once. I love this album, it's different and pulls you in to listen more closely to all the layers. Looking forward to future releases.

user avatar

Interstellar

EMUSIC-029C461F

Smooth and edgy all at once. I love this album, it's different and pulls you in to listen more closely to all the layers. Looking forward to future releases.

user avatar

Pleasantly Rewarding

dylanboy

Online searching for new music tonight and stumbled on this. I had just decided not to buy the new School of Seven Bells because, just like Andrew Birds new album, I was not impressed with the same racket. Here in Interstellar is the depth that both afore mentioned albums needed, but lacked. I'm looking forward to delving into Interstellar with a glass of brandy and no where to go but deeper into bliss.

user avatar

Interstellar

Babama

Pretty vacuous stuff. The music this recording is being held up to in the reviews (e.g. pre-pop Cure, Cocteau Twins, etc) is pretty anonymous sounding to being with, but oozes U2-sized personality compared to Ms. Rose. But I guess the Billburg boutiques still need background music...

Recommended Albums

eMusic Features

0

Jukebox Jury: Frankie Rose

By J. Edward Keyes, Editor-in-Chief

In our experiment, Frankie Rose went undercover to talk to real-life space travelers about their experiences beyond the stars, and to ask them about the similarities between her album and the cosmos that inspired it. But outer space wasn't the only influence on Frankie Rose. In this Jukebox Jury, we talk to her about the many different songs that shaped the sound of Interstellar. Frankie Rose's apartment looks out on to the bridge that connects… more »