11-27: Lightning Bolt: Hypermagic Mountain
11-20: Wooden Wand and the Vanishi...: The Flood
10-02: ...: Oboroed/Circus Live...
07-04: Need New Body: Where's Black Ben?
04-09: Caribou: The Milk of Human Kindness
10-13: Sonic Youth: Sonic Nurse
10-13: Things Explod...: It's Never Worked Befor...
10-03: Controller.Controller: History
Music Reviews index


11-09: Three...Extremes
10-19: Battle Royale II
10-04: A History of Violence
08-26: Grizzly Man
08-22: The 40 Year-Old Virgin
08-12: The Dukes of Hazzard
08-05: The Devil's Rejects
08-03: The Island
Movie Reviews index


01-06: List: Best/Worst of 2005: Movies
08-28: List: 2004's 50 Best Albums, Part 2
07-02: List: 2004's Best and Worst Movies
04-20: Article: Mikel Ate That CD
04-20: Interview: Half of the Fiery Furnaces
04-17: List: 2004's 50 Best Albums, Part 1
04-08: List: 2003's 20 Best Albums
Features index


Frost: Steelwound
Frost
Steelwound
Room40: 2004

69


As "Swarm" fades in and slowly meanders on, I can't help but picture a slow moving aerial view of the Pyramids. Their ancient bodies sticking up from the lightly waving sand, worn by time and the elements, lonely in an empty desert. Simple, slowly changing notes that evoke emotion so easily are only reminiscent to the extremely similar Playthroughs by Keith Fullerton Whitman. But where Whitman hits his notes perfectly to amazing effects, Frost wanders with more of a patterned, looping structure, with less powerful results. Frost's ambience is less about melody and completely about texture, and although he excels at this, it calls for many uninteresting moments throughout Steelwound.

Fortunately, when Frost does hit his stride, it is truly moving. The amazing highlight "You, Me and the End of Everything" shows the addition of soft, haunting female vocals to the usual guitar only composition. As the guitar reverb swells as it loops forwards through ten minutes of worldly destruction, it really feels like the world is slowly getting smaller. The progression of the track is similar in feel to the recent wonder Disintegration Loops by William Basinski as the loop accumulates grit and imperfection, yet where most of the Disintegration Loops fades off into the distance as they die away, "You, Me and the End of Everything" swells louder and louder until finally, everything has ended. And, in the end, with reasonably simplistic composition, Frost has pulled off an epic comparable to GYBE's "East Hastings" (who can forget the barren London landscape the song so perfectly augmented in 28 Days Later?).

Frost is more complex than both Whitman or Basinski, and what he lacks in strength he makes up for with skill. His well-built textures prove his skill as an artist, but even with the occasional heart-wrenching moment, Steelwound, like any other ambient album, occasionally falls into boredom. Where the album stands strong, it still seems to lack the originality, ingenuity, and occasional distant percussion that kept Loscil's Submers and First Narrows constantly interesting. Hopefully, before his next release, Frost will delve even deeper into his music and focus some more of his effort towards consistency.


quoth Andrew Wexler.



1/ Swarm...
2/ ...I Lay My Ear to Furious Latin
-> 3/ You, Me and the End of Everything
4/ Steel Wound
5/ Last Exit to Brooklyn
6/ And I Watched You Breathe