Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

The Cost

 
Album Review: The Cost

  • Artist: The Frames
  • Rating: StarStarStarStar
  • Release Date: February 20, 2007
  • Type: Lyrics are included with the album
  • Genre: Rock

Review

If the Frames don't crack it with The Cost then there is something terribly wrong. The Irish heroes, who often get picked ahead of U2 at being the best live band at home, see this, their seventh album in a little over a decade and their third issued on the Anti label, home to Tom Waits, Nick Cave, Neko Case, Joe Henry, Danny Cohen, Marianne Faithfull, Blackalicious and Daniel Lanois, among others. The label pedigree is no accident. The Cost was recorded live in the studio in ten days. The idea was to capture some of the excitement and drama the band exude in truckloads during their live shows. With Steve Fitzmaurice and David Odlum at the helm, this is no garage rock date, but it drips with immediacy and emotion. Fronted by songwriter Glen Hansard, the quintet donned electric and acoustic guitars, simple keyboards, and drums augmented by strings and very subtle, atmospheric brass. In other words, the setting -- Black Box in France -- and extra musicians make this the Frames recording to beat and carries within it the possibility of pop greatness. This is indie pop developed to such a level that it has to be impossible to deny. Check the lilt and tension in "People Get Ready," (not the Curtis Mayfield song) where each individual is asked to evaluate her or his own life and prepare for something bigger than they are -- namely the chance to not be denied collectively. Hansard's voice is tender and tough, soft and large, and he gets to the meat of a lyric without having to exert his sincerity, unlike another frontman of a hugely popular Irish band. The strings and guitars swell and swoop, they ebb and flow together and make the entire track nearly lift off the ground. "Rise" has all the erotic tension of a great Tindersticks tune without any of the derisive or bitter irony -- not to mention Hansard's beautiful singing voice. Two tracks Hansard recorded with Czech actress, singer, composer and multi-instrumentalist Markéta Irglová, who he collaborated with on the unsung-in-the U.S. CD Swell Season (and with whom he also co-starred in the John Carney film Once) are re-recorded here: "Falling Slowly" (which may lose a bit of its erotic focus but gains in sheer accessibility), and "When Your Mind's Made Up."

The title track is a weeper, fueled by a slow distorted electric guitar, a snare and a hi hat. Hansard's spare phrasing and his way of spacing his lines apart allow the song's meaning -- as classic a theme of love and loss as has been recorded in this century thus far -- to come through in the silences. "Bad Bone" is the set's final cut. With a slow, whispering acoustic guitar entering just after his vocal Hansard sings: "There's a bad bone inside of me/all my trouble started there/and all the cracks are adding up to be/a little more than you can bear . . " Another guitar joins him and the tune is vaguely reminiscent of Neil Young's "Helpless," but it's drawn out quietly to bring the listener in. A violin joins the electric guitars on the refrain and Hansard sings: "When the anger that you feel/Turns to poison in your soul/And then the scars you only feel/Will start to show..." the last words come out of his mouth almost as an afterthought; the tune becomes more revelatory as the story unfolds, bringing the listener to reverie, to that moment of shame hidden in her or his life that adds that empathy and a type of hush usually reserved for the revelation of long buried secrets and disappointments. The Cost is brilliant pop music that doesn't mope in its darker moments. Hansard states his case clearly and effortlessly. The Cost reflects us with a conscience that doesn't shy away from poetry or craft, and gets it all across with the immediacy of a performance. The Frames may have a slew of albums and be Ireland's best-kept secret in the U. S., but The Cost signals their true arrival as artists of the first order, who can pull it off on a stage, and on record. This stuff is pure musical and lyrical inspiration. ~ Thom Jurek, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Song for Someone The Frames The Frames (5:36)
Falling Slowly (Lyrics) The Frames The Frames (4:35)
People Get Ready (Lyrics) The Frames The Frames (5:28)
Rise (Lyrics) The Frames The Frames (3:26)
When Your Mind's Made Up (Lyrics) The Frames The Frames (3:44)
Sad Songs (Lyrics) The Frames The Frames (3:09)
The Cost The Frames The Frames (4:20)
True (Lyrics) The Frames The Frames (5:14)
The Side You Never Get to See The Frames The Frames (3:40)
Bad Bone (Lyrics) The Frames The Frames (4:42)

Credits

Colm Mac Con Iomaire (Group Member), Steve Fitzmaurice (Engineer), Joseph Doyle (Group Member), C. Leadbitter (Fonts), David Odlum (Mixing), Glen Hansard (Group Member), Conor Masterson (Photography), Michal Kern (Photography), Steve Fitzmaurice (Mixing), Greg Calbi (Mastering), David Odlum (Engineer), Daragh McDonagh (Photography), Johnny Boyle (Group Member), Rob Bochnik (Group Member), Fabian Lesure (Assistant)
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Wikipedia: The Cost
Top
The Cost
Studio album by The Frames
Released September 22, 2006 (Ireland)
February 20, 2007 (International)
Recorded March 2006
Genre Rock
Label Plateau Records (Ireland)
ANTI- (International)
Professional reviews
The Frames chronology
Burn the Maps
(2004)
The Cost
(2006)

The Cost is the sixth studio album by The Frames, released in Ireland on Plateau Records on September 22, 2006. The album was released worldwide on ANTI- on February 20, 2007. The album exhibits a sound more like that of For the Birds than their more recent album Burn the Maps. The Frames' line-up for The Cost features Glen Hansard on guitar and vocals, Colm Mac Con Iomaire on violin and keyboards, Joseph Doyle on bass guitar and backing vocals, Rob Bochnik on lead guitar and Graham Hopkins who played drums in place of the Frames' regular drummer Johnny Boyle. It was recorded in Black Box, France by Stephen Fitzmaurice and David Odlum with assistance from Fabian Lesure. The front and back covers feature photography by frontman Hansard of oak leaves, accompanied by a handwritten inscription reading: "Ni identitat permanent, ni idea de persona, ni d'ésser vivant, ni d'un temps d'existencia" (which is Catalan for "Nor permanent identity, nor idea of a person, nor of being alive, nor of a time of existence"). The album is enigmatically dedicated to "Multi (the ghost)".

Three songs on the album have been released before on separate productions. "Rise" appeared on The Roads Outgrown. Both "Falling Slowly" and "When Your Mind's Made Up" appeared on the 2006 album The Swell Season released by Glen Hansard and the Czech pianist Marketa Irglova. All three of these songs have been reworked for the album. Irglova shares writing credits with Hansard (and the band) on "Falling Slowly" and "People Get Ready".

A deluxe edition of the album was released on the US iTunes Store on May 13, 2008. It included three extra tracks - "The Blood," "No More I Love Yous," and "This Low," as well as the music videos for "Falling Slowly," "Sad Songs," and "The Side You Never Get To See."

Track listing

  1. "Song for Someone"
  2. "Falling Slowly"
  3. "People All Get Ready"
  4. "Rise"
  5. "When Your Mind's Made Up"
  6. "Sad Songs"
  7. "The Cost"
  8. "True"
  9. "The Side You Never Get to See"
  10. "Bad Bone"

Chart positions

Country Position
Ireland 2|

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "The Cost" Read more