Frigid Stars Codeine

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CD

  • Release Date: 01/01/1994
  • Original Release: 1990
  • Sales Rank: 53,902
  • Label: SUB POP
  • UPC: 098787010725

Listener Rating: (1 ratings)

Detailed Rating: "Essential" See All

 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
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Frigid Stars

1LISTEND 4:27
2LISTENGravel Bed 3:58
3LISTENPickup Song 2:44
4LISTENNew Year's 3:33
5LISTENSecond Chance 4:45
6LISTENCave In 3:37
7LISTENCigarette Machine 4:42
8LISTENOld Things 4:59
9LISTEN3 Angels 4:51
10LISTENPea 3:38

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

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, All Music Guide

Customer Reviews

  • Listener Rating:
  • Ratings: 1Reviews: 1

Beautiful and Heavyby kristen-kay

Reader Rating:
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November 02, 2008: Codeine's Frigid Stars is easily one of the most devastating, depressing albums ever recorded. ...But this isn't a negative criticism. The entire atmosphere of the album manages to be so dark, heavy, and sleepy... yet it draws you in closer... the sound just encompasses you, swallows you whole.

It's some beautiful stuff.

Codeine hail from Chicago and this is precisely what being in the middle of a decent-sized Midwestern city when you're bummed out on a dreary, frigid day can sound like. Trust me, I've been there. And I wish I would have had this album playing in my car or on my headphones at the time because it would have been absolutely perfect. Ah, well.

Somehow I've been able to listen to this album when I've been in a reasonable mood, but it never really feels completely right unless I'm in a questionable mood. It's also one of those albums that you really just have to play for yourself. It's just one of those recordings that was meant to be personal, I suppose. Anyway, I love it for what it is. Intense and moody.

I Also Recommend: The White Birch, Barely Real.