Categories
Albums

Best albums of 2010: #5 Stars “The five ghosts”

Stars are a five-piece Canadian indie rock band that originally formed as the duo of Torquil Campbell and Christopher Seligman back in 2000. After their debut album, “Nightsongs”, was released in 2001, they began adding members. By the time “Heart” was released two years later, the band was up to their current roster size, after adding Evan Cranley, Amy Millan, and Patrick McGee, and the lineup has remained pretty much unchanged ever since. What I find interesting is that most, if not all of the band’s members grew up in Toronto, but the band has never been based there, finding its roots in New York City originally and then, later, relocating to Montreal.

I got into Stars around the same time as pretty much everyone else: shortly after “Set yourself on fire” was let loose on the public in 2004. This was fortuitously right in the middle of the Canadian indie rock renaissance, when all of a sudden, the world realized that music was being made in that gigantic country north of the United States. “Set yourself on fire” is widely considered Stars’ best album and admittedly, it is still my favourite out of all their albums. This is mostly because I know it so well, having listened to it incessantly when I first got a copy of it. Nevertheless, I love all of the albums Stars have since released (including this one, obviously), and if not loved, was able to appreciate the music on their first two when I went back to discover them. And I fully expect that any new album that they come out with next will be great as well, which is why I’ve rarely hesitated in pre-ordering each new album for my vinyl collection without so much as test driving one song. I can do something so rash with an ease of mind because they’ve established a consistency with each album, a sound that is recognizably their own and for us fans, is as comfortable as sitting in our jammies at the kitchen table with a warm cup of coffee and often, makes us want to interrupt our convalescence to get up and dance.

I remember succumbing to the elegance and beauty of Stars’ fifth album, “The five ghosts”, right away, much like I did for “Set yourself on fire”, but unlike its predecessor “In our bedroom after the war”, which started a bit tart but aged like a fine wine. They were on the vanguard of the resurgent trend of duelling male/female lead vocals, a quality that led me to make comparisons to The Beautiful South in the early days of my relationship with the band. On “The five ghosts”, Torquil Campbell and Amy Millan share the duties almost fifty-fifty and on those songs that they spar, the battle of the sexes is played out like the work of art that it is. Campbell doesn’t hide away his love for Morrissey and The Smiths and also channels Paul Heaton and well, Millan’s soft but smart delivery often makes you feel like she could break you in half without you even knowing she’s doing it.

The song titles and lyrics on “The five ghosts” are dark, evoking the macabre with words like death, bones, and haunting, but the album is very much alive. It’s a game Stars play well, much like The Beautiful South (okay, maybe I’m belabouring the comparison now), this juxtaposing of somber themes with seemingly fluffy and cuddly pop music. Not that you should surmise their music is simple, throwaway schlock. Stars are a complete unit, a stylistic package. The music is as intricately designed as one could wish, each layer a delight to pull away and examine in your hands, like the wisps of a cobweb dripping with dew. So yes, let the sun break through fog and delight in it.

If you’re not already listening to Stars, put them on now, preferably “The five ghosts”. If it’s not in your musical arsenal, have a crack at my three picks for you, just a few of the great pieces off the album:


“Changes”: Track seven is peppy and retro, it harkens back to the golden days of the movie musical. I’m thinking ‘Singing in the rain’ here. A synthesizer programmed drum machine sets the tone, abracadabra, confetti, and a sweet bass line starts the microwave to melt your soul like butter and Amy Millan’s lilting turn on vocals, invoking that of Kirsty MacColl, does the rest just fine. “Changes, I’ve never been good with change. I hate it when it all stays the same.” And before you all start crying nudity foul at the NSFW video, it’s an artsy-fartsy thing, playing on some sort of metamorphosis theme, good versus evil, light versus dark, ballet in the buff, and it was shot in the beautiful Winter Garden theatre in Toronto, which makes it all okay.

“Dead hearts”: The opening track on the album features the trademark Campbell and Millan call and response vocal work. It might almost be considered a tad precious with the chiming arpeggios, the graceful strings, and pitch perfect harmonizing if it weren’t for the fact that you knew by the title that they were singing about not just broken but, dead hearts. It was number seven on my Best tunes of 2010 list and in that particular post I also talked about the “gentle jingling guitars, the lonely tinkling piano, the string explosion, and [the] push/pull harmonies [that] all call to mind a fantastical world of a creative child’s imagination.” Haunting and wonderful and joyful in its misery and in its hope. “It’s hard to know they’re out there. It’s hard to know that you still care.”

“Fixed”: “You, you hold my heart. You, you won’t let up. After when I’m caught, touch turns into fisticuffs.” Much like the previous song, this one appeared on my Best tunes of 2010 list, this time at number twenty. It’s one of a good handful of dance floor fillers on the album. Millan takes the lead for this one, sounding almost hopeful and glorious, set against 80s synths and Madchester drums. As I’ve said before, “The drumming is peppy and the synths keep pace, urging any and all listeners to get up and dance, no matter where they are, the bus, a crowded sidewalk, or with a broom in the kitchen, and forget everything but the beat.” This is what makes Stars so great. They can challenge you to think at the same time is they are encouraging a great time. But let’s not lose the plot here. Finish that drink and let’s get out the on the floor.


Stay tuned for album #4. In the meantime, here are the previous albums in this list:

10. Diamond Rings “Special affections”
9. Bedouin Soundclash “Light the horizon”
8. LCD Soundsystem “This is happening”
7. The Drums “The Drums”
6. The New Pornographers “Together”

You can also check out my Best Albums page here if you’re interested in my other favourite albums lists.

Categories
Vinyl

Vinyl love: Death Cab For Cutie “Transatlanticism”

(Vinyl Love is a series of posts that quite simply lists, describes, and displays the pieces in my growing vinyl collection. You can bet that each record was given a spin during the drafting of each corresponding post.)

Artist: Death Cab For Cutie
Album Title: Transatlanticism
Year released: 2003
Year reissued: 2013
Details: Gatefold sleeve, 10th anniversary, 2 x 180 gram, 12-page booklet

The skinny: I finally got around to purchasing a full pass to this year’s Ottawa Bluesfest and I can’t even really explain why I procrastinated so much. The organizer’s typically do a pretty good job of putting together a diverse lineup that tries to please everyone to some extent (and invariably, disappoints many) but this year’s lineup suits my own personal tastes better than it has for many years now. There’s at least one act on each of the festival’s nine days that I really want to see*. And one of the acts I’m most looking forward to is Death Cab for Cutie, who I saw live for the first time more than 15 years ago but haven’t seen since. This performance is part of the tour supporting last year’s “Asphalt meadows” but they are also touring in the fall to celebrate the 20th anniversary of their now iconic 4th album, “Translatlanticism”. I can’t even believe that I purchased the copy of this very same record for my vinyl shelves a decade ago: a 10th anniversary, 180-gram double LP edition, complete with a gatefold sleeve and a lovely 12-page booklet. This was procured back when my collection was still in its infancy and probably just around the time that I finally bought my turntable. “Transatlanticism” was a no-hesitation purchase because it was my introduction to this great band upon its initial release and with all the albums they’ve released since, it’s one I return to time and time again.

Standout track: “The sound of settling”

*But I’ill likely have to miss a night or two in the interest of conserving energy.

Categories
Playlists

Playlist: À la mode – Thirty great Depeche Mode tunes

Depeche Mode is likely the band I have been following and listening to the longest out of all the artists that I would consider as part of my all time greats. I first came upon them mid-way through high school and have been listening to them ever since, which if you actually knew how old I am, you’d realized is quite a long time.

Back in 2020, the synth pop icons celebrated their 40th anniversary together as a going concern. The COVID pandemic likely scuttled some of the big plans the band might have had to celebrate the occasion but it thankfully didn’t impact their well-deserved induction into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. That very same year I dedicated a bunch of words and time writing three posts celebrating some of my very favourite tunes by Depeche Mode in the 1980s and 1990s and everything thereafter. I had mused back then that the group was due for a new album, given that it had already been three years at that point since their last.

When founding member Andrew Fletcher passed away in the spring of 2022, though, I figured that was it for one of my favourite bands. I’d heard that Martin Gore and David Gahan planned to soldier on as a duo but I didn’t believe anything would really come of it. When they announced the impending release of Depeche Mode’s 15th studio album, “Memento mori”, I knew I would give it a listen but never did I suspect it would be my favourite by the band in almost two decades.

Listening to tracks like “Wagging tongue” and “Ghosts again” reminded me of what drew me to them in first place. Indeed, this new album got me reminiscing, once again, on their incredible back catalogue, how it has soundtracked the best and worst times of my life, and has probably done the same for many others. And that thought got me thinking about my favourite tracks by Depeche Mode and I started putting together a playlist of what I’d consider to be the best of their best. A new playlist, I thought, what a novelty!

Usually, I limit these playlists of mine to 25 songs but it just didn’t seem enough for Depeche Mode so I stretched it to 30. And here is the playlist (with some commentary) in all its Youtube glory:

1. Dreaming of me

    • The band’s first ever single is the obvious place to start this playlist. Written by Vince Clarke, its light energy foreshadowed the dance pop material on their debut long player.

2. Just can’t get enough

    • The big single off Depeche Mode’s debut album, “Speak & spell”, is the only other song here written by founding member, Vince Clarke, who shortly afterwards left to form Yazoo with Alison Moyet. He was always concerned more with hooks than lyrics and this one left it all on the dance floor.

3. Everything counts

    • Martin Gore took over the bulk of songwriting duties with Clarke’s departure and he really started to hit his stride on the band’s third album, “Construction time again”. I’ve include an extended version of the first single, a rail against corporate greed and corruption.

4. People are people
5. Blasphemous rumours

    • “Some great reward” was the first album by the band that I purchased for myself on cassette tape, years after the band’s fourth album was released. I remember singing the chorus of the first of these two singles over and over again while delivering papers as a teen and the second one was favourite for turning up loudly in my bedroom when I was feeling low.

6. But not tonight
7. A question of lust
8. Stripped

    • I picked up a used CD copy of “Black celebration”, the fifth album, many years after its original release and a few years after becoming a fan. It marked a further journey into darker and more romantic (or is it just lustful) territory, as evidenced by the latter two of these tracks. The first was a bonus track on my CD that appeared in the 80s rom-com “Modern girls” and for some reason, always got under my skin.

9. Behind the wheel
10. Never let me down again
11. The things you said

    • The sixth album’s title was a tongue-in-cheek play on the group’s place in popular culture and their commercial appeal and ironically, found them finally finding success in North America. These three tracks from “Music for the masses” are Mode at their gloomy best.

12. Black celebration (live)
13. Somebody (live)

    • During their very last (101st) stop on their North American tour in support of the last album, the shows were recorded and collected as a double live album called “101”. It’s one of my favourite live albums of all time and given the playlist, considered by many as almost another ‘best of’ collection. It was my own introduction to much of their incredible back catalogue.

14. Enjoy the silence
15. Personal Jesus
16. Waiting for the night
17. World in my eyes

    • Coming off their most successful tour, the synth pop quartet then recorded what is arguably their best album. “Violator” spawned four incredible and at the time, ubiquitous singles, three of which are represented here. The fourth is one of my favourites of all time by the group, a haunting track that is best listened to with the lights out.

18. Death’s door

    • Depeche Mode contributed this uncharacteristically low-key track to the soundtrack to the 1991 Wim Winders film, “Until the end of the world”. It perfectly fit with the mood and lackadaisical pace of the film and those of us hungry for new music from the group ate it up.

19. I feel you
20. One caress
21. Walking in my shoes

    • Three years seemed an eternity between Mode albums at the time but 1993’s “Songs of faith and devotion” was worth the wait. It was by times more aggressive and rock-oriented than their previous work and at others, had a lot more soul and life. By all accounts, though, its recording was difficult and is the final album on which Alan Wilder appears, given he left the group after its tour cycle.

22. Barrel of a gun
23. It’s no good

    • The remaining trio soldiered on and returned with “Ultra”, their ninth studio album, in 1997. The results for me were a bit uneven. Though I enjoyed a few of its tracks, include the two singles above, this was the first of their albums that I rarely wanted to listen to all the way through.

24. Dream on

    • On “Exciter”, the group moved on from synth pop into electronica territory. The album’s first single was “Dream on”, on which Martin Gore set a driving guitar line against rave-ready beat and David Gahan gave it some soul.

25. Precious
26. A pain that I’m used to

    • “Playing the angel” found the group back in familiar Depeche Mode territory. Indeed, the two excellent tracks included here are both sleek, dark, and sexy.

27. Peace

    • The second single released off of Mode’s 12th studio album, 2009’s “Sounds of the universe” is real spiritual. The song is heavy percussive low end synths with high end electronic beats, flittering and frittering digital party streamers, and then, more synth washes give way to breakbeats and other flourishes.

28. Where’s the revolution

    • The group’s last album before the pandemic and before Andy Fletcher’s death whittled them down to a duo was 2017’s “Spirit”. It wasn’t my favourite of their albums but had a couple bright spots, including this twitchy and industrial, political call to arms.

29. Wagging tongue
30. Ghosts again

    • And here we are at the end, or is it a new beginning, only time will tell, but as I hinted at above, tracks like above two from the new album are some of their best in a decade or so.

For the whole playlist on Apple music, click here. Enjoy!


If you’re interested in checking out any of the other playlists I’ve created and shared on these pages, you can peruse them here.