Tears Of The Valedictorian

Rate It! Avg: 3.5 (171 ratings)
Tears Of The Valedictorian album cover
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 9   Total Length: 36:10

Write a Review 6 Member Reviews

Please register before you review a release. Register

user avatar

Nervous, manic spazz out rock. The Best.

liverkick

These guys do it like no one else. A lot of people can't get past Mercer's voice, but those people suck it. Frog Eyes is your master, deal with it.

user avatar

Try "Golden River" instead, MUCH better

pataphysismo

Not sure what's up with Frog Eyes, but pretty much every record besides "The Golden River" has been unmemorable, including this very disappointing valedictory--just noise, really, though engaging if you're in that mood. But PLEASE check out "Golden River," b/c it's amazing, epic, often beautiful (in a terrifying kind of way:-), and much more accessible/hooky than pretty all their other stuff (not sure why other Emusic folk don't seem to rate it very highly, but it did get some rave reviews when it first came out, which is why I got it in the first place).

user avatar

sounds like...

strangewheels

...The Arcade Fire meets Modest Mouse. I've heard all this stuff before.

user avatar

GOOOOOD!

Obiben

Frog Eyes reçoit de l’attention souvent parce que Spencer Krug (Wolf Parade, Sunset Rundown) fait partie de la formation mais cette fois-ci ils vont sûrement en recevoir parce qu’ils ont livré un album solide et épatant soulevé par la voix unique de Carey Mercer qu’on a pu entendre dans le super groupe Swan Lake composé de lui-même, Dan Bejar (Destroyer, New Pornographers) et Spencer Krug (Wolf Parade, Sunset Rubdown). Des moments intenses il y en a sur Tears of the Valedictorian et la pièce “Stockades” vaut l’achat de l’album à elle seule! Des claviers qui rappellent Genesis par moments et un Carey Mercer qui vous montre toute la puissance de sa voix. Chair de poule assurée! http://www.mu6.ca

user avatar

I disagree.

rocknrollsulan

I might be listening to a different band, here, but I've always thought of Frog Eyes as a "manic" band and there's loads of "majestic" moments here, too (see "Caravan Breakers...).

user avatar

A very good album from my hometown's best band

Jackmandrew

The record favors the band's manic side, which is somewhat disappointing. It is a very good album -"Stockades" and the two longer tracks are standouts- but the slow, twisted majesty that is present in their other albums is sadly underrepresented here.

Recommended Albums

They Say All Music Guide

Now four albums in, Northwest Canada-based, Dante’s Inferno outfitters Frog Eyes seem less like a band and more like a movement. While the quartet’s intentions are suspect, one listen to Tears of the Valedictorian confirms the group’s uncanny talent for creating manic, beautiful, and upsetting songs that seem to exist wholly for themselves. Trying to pull any meaning from Carey Mercer’s pulpit-pounding rants is a course in futility (“When you bottom the boats/the weeds deign to sigh/but the admiral’s chicken/the general’s chicken/how painful they rise”), but his conviction is so intense that it both captivates and worries the listener, much like a cogent, holy spirit-possessed homeless person challenging passerby with Bible passages laced with profanity. Musically, the band continues to push the envelope of pop music by speeding it up, chopping it into bite-size psychedelic pieces, feeding it back to themselves, then throwing it up through your speakers. A truly keen sense of melody keeps their twitchy, angular armaments from flying out the window, especially on the gorgeous “Stockades,” the Joe Meek-inspired “Idle Songs,” and the epic “Bushels,” a mammoth piece of work that stomps around in a fit, continuously changing course and descending into a mad scat section that dissipates into an oddly endearing mantra of self-awareness (“I was a singer and I sang in your home”). Indeed. – James Christopher Monger

more »