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The Cost | 
enlarge | Artist: The Frames Label: Anti Category: Music
List Price: $16.98 Buy Used: $6.50 You Save: $10.48 (62%)
New (43) from $9.69
Avg. Customer Rating: 15 reviews
Media: Audio CD Discs: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 5.5 x 4.9 x 0.3
MPN: 86841 UPC: 457786841202 EAN: 0045778684120
Release Date: February 20, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: excellent condition, fast ship!
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| Tracks:
| • | Song for Someone | | • | Falling Slowly | | • | People Get Ready | | • | Rise | | • | When Your Mind's Made Up | | • | Sad Songs | | • | The Cost | | • | True | | • | The Side You Never Get to See | | • | Bad Bone |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com You're three tracks into The Cost before you find a song, "The Rise," that opens with anything but singer Glen Hansard's voice as the first thing you hear. The beauty is, you're waiting for the voice, with its hints of Cat Stevens's tonality and its utterly distinct Irish lift. It's Hansard that provides the Frames with such a rising vibe, the sense of a band always lifting off, pressed higher by Colm Mac An Iomaire's violin. Mac An Iomaire's strings slip and slide in the thickets of guitar, playing exceptional cat and mouse both when the guitars are clear and crisp and when they're crashing furiously. The Frames wouldn't claim to write epic tunes, but over and over the songs build toward ecstatic sonic events. Witness the hushed open to "People Get Ready" how it morphs into a violin and guitar-grit blast of wind-blown energy or the distortion-scoured hum behind Hansard's lone voice on "True" launching a languorous, piano-driven backdrop as the singer lets loose a first-class yowl--the stuff of anguished beauty. --Andrew Bartlett
Album Details 2006 Issued Sixth Album by the Irish Band featuring the Lineup of Bassist Joseph Doyle, Violinist/Keyboardist Colm Mac Coniomaire, Lead Guitarist Rob Bochnik, Drummer Graham Hopkins (Subbing for Johnny Boyle) and Vocalist/Guitarist Glen Hansard. The Album was Recorded in France at Black Box Studios. Three of the Songs were Released in Previous Incarnations Prior to the LP Release and have Been Re-recorded by the Band for this Project: "Rise" First Appeared on the 2003 EP "The Roads Outgrown" and "Falling Slowly" and "When Your Mind's Made Up" were First Heard on "The Swell Season", an Album Issued by Guitarist Hansard and Pianist Marketa Irglova. The Haunting Cover Art Comes from a Photograph by Hansard.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 10 more reviews...
A truly wonderful album March 15, 2007 61 out of 62 found this review helpful
There is no question that the Frames are a quality band. The problem in the past has been that they frequently release albums that do not represent their best work. I first learned of them through a truly great album by the title FITZCARRALDO (named for the Werner Herzog film about an Irishman named Fitzgerald--Fitzcarraldo was how the locals transformed it--who had the insane dream of building an opera house in the middle of the Amazon). After several albums either somewhat or considerably below the high standards set by FITZCARRALDO, they have released a new album, THE COST, that is very nearly as great as that one. Truth be told, there is very little to separate the two in quality. I think the earlier album has a bit more of an edge. So may prefer the slightly softer contours of this newer album. But I will insist that anyone who loves this album will love equally the other, while fans of the earlier album will be delighted to find the band completely back in form. What is amazing is that it took them so long. FITZCARRALDO was released in 1996, while this one is a 2007 effort. Whatever the cause of their return, I am ecstatic that they are back.
I don't want to get into the debate about whether The Frames or U2 is the better back. Both are Irish, which is what invites the comparison. I will say that I rarely listen to U2, while I have frequently listened to one or another Frames album. I personally far prefer Glen Hansard as a vocalist to Bono. While Hansard lacks Bono's range and power, he has a subtlety and soulfulness that Bono lacks. He possesses some of the soulfulness of the greatest of all Irish rock vocalists, Van Morrison, though I wouldn't make the silly claim that he is on Morrison's level as a singer (for that matter, who is?).
The word on the Frames is that they are a mediocre studio band but an astonishing live band (I unfortunately have never heard them live), a distinction they hold with other great live acts. The Feelies, for instance, was one of the best bands in the world on a stage, but never recorded an album that matched their energy onstage (I did manage to see them live and can vouch for the excellence as a live act). The strategy on this album was to record the songs in very little time in the studio, hopefully to maintain some of the power of their stage performances. Whatever the reason, this isn't at all the same band that sometimes can sound a tad bland in a studio recording. The result is a great disc that might remind some of the Tindersticks at their best, but with far more emotion than that band ever exuded. And while there is some great playing on the recording, the engineers keep Hansard's incredible voice front and center.
This is a disc of many highpoints, but for me the best part might be the back-to-back gems "Sad Songs," which sounds like it could be a Top Forty hit, and the title track "The Cost." The former driven by wonderful hooks and infectious melodies, one of those songs that is so lovely that you love it almost on the first listen. "The Cost" is far more minimalistic, almost a duet between distorted guitar and Hansard, with just enough percussion to remind you that the drummer is still there. The song, like other cuts on the album, could easily slip over into bathos, but they keep the touch just right. Another cut I keep going back to is the opening one, "Song for Someone," but I love listening to the way that Hansard sings the chorus of the next cut, "Falling Slowly," nearly as much. But the next song, "People Get Ready," might be, if I were pressed to acknowledge a favorite, the one I like most on the disc. But there really are no bad cuts on the album, making it one of those albums you listen to repeatedly with tremendous joy.
While the Frames have not always been this good on record, they have been at least this good once before. Maybe they have turned a corner and this represents what they will do from here on out. But even if this is a one-time thing, this is a disc that anyone who loves great indie rock needs to own. Both THE COST and FITZCARRALDO belong in any decent musical library.
The Cost? - worth it, regardless February 20, 2007 43 out of 44 found this review helpful
Dearly loved and appreciated in their native Ireland and huge in the Czech Republic (interestingly enough), The Frames haven't quite managed to achieve that same level of success elsewhere. Nevertheless, the band continue to box on, crafting one stirring, richly melodic album after another, for a relatively small but fiercely devoted audience. The Cost is their ninth, and quite possibly the most conventional of any record in The Frames back-catalogue. Where that might mean creative death for some bands, for The Frames it only serves to spotlight the groups strengths. Having reined in the experimental urges and filed down the harder edges that tainted 2005's otherwise good `Burn The Maps', it's pleasing to hear that The Frames have lost none of their trademark intensity in the process. The ten songs on The Cost, as a result, hang together beautifully, in what is probably their most focused, consistent and downright enjoyable set of songs to date.
There are frequent moments of exhilarating beauty here (especially when Colm Mac Con Iomaire's soaring violin enters the fray). Then there's frontman Glen Hansard's voice, which remains one of the most exhilarating in rock music. Hansard is a vocalist capable of both quiet, contemplative soul-searching and visceral, gut-wrenching catharsis. He never screams, or whines, or grates, he just sings brilliantly and affectingly - like his life depends on it. For all we know it does, on The Cost he seems to chisel heartfelt yearning into every lyric. On the rousing, achingly beautiful `Falling Slowly' Hansard sings "take this sinking boat.. and point it home.. we've still got time" It's a lyric that may not read all that impressively on paper, but in the lead-singer's hands such words become imbued with a ragged glory, and a fiery, down but-not-out sense of hope. This song, like several others on The Cost, builds to a thrilling climax, with sumptuous orchestration intertwining with Hansard's impassioned, world-weary delivery. As if to add balance, other tunes on The Cost are content just to simmer, without needing to come to the boil. Crucially, these tracks are no less riveting than the more anthemic, climactic ones, and therein lies the key to this albums success - a sustained beauty and intensity throughout.
Dripping with gorgeous melancholy and raw elegance, The Cost may be The Frames most compelling creation yet.
Like this? Try> Glen Hansard & Marketa Irglova - The Swell Season The Frames - Dance The Devil Damien Rice - 9
Don't pass this one up!!!!!!! March 15, 2007 10 out of 11 found this review helpful
Never haveing heard of The Frames, I read a very good review of "The Cost" and ordered it. I am so glad I did. I put it in my cd player 2 weeks ago and I've listened to the whole cd about 10 times. If you buy music to listen to all of the songs on the cd, you'll especially like this one as EVERY song is great. As I said above, don't pass this one up. You will be forever gratefull that you got it!
Disappointing March 30, 2007 7 out of 20 found this review helpful
Mostly ballads, The Cost seems like a Glen Hansard solo album. But that's not really the disappointment here; few of the ballads present anything unique or musically compelling. Yes, Glen has a lovely voice and conveys great empathy, sincerity and beauty. But the songs themselves get too monotonous after a while.
The Cost? - worth it, regardless January 31, 2007 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
Dearly loved and appreciated in their native Ireland and huge in the Czech Republic (interestingly enough), The Frames haven't quite managed to achieve that same level of success elsewhere. Nevertheless, the band continue to box on, crafting one stirring, richly melodic album after another, for a relatively small but fiercely devoted audience. The Cost is their ninth, and it's quite possibly the most conventional of any record in The Frames back-catalogue. Where that might mean creative death for some bands, for The Frames it only serves to spotlight the groups strengths. Having reined in the experimental urges and filed down the harder edges that tainted 2005's otherwise good `Burn The Maps', it's pleasing to hear that The Frames have lost none of their trademark intensity in the process. The ten songs on The Cost, as a result, hang together beautifully, in what is probably their most focused, consistent and downright enjoyable set of songs to date.
There are frequent moments of exhilarating beauty here (especially when Colm Mac Con Iomaire's soaring violin enters the fray). Then there's frontman Glen Hansard's voice, which remains one of the most exhilarating in rock music. Hansard is a vocalist capable of both quiet, contemplative soul-searching and visceral, gut-wrenching catharsis. He never screams, or whines, or grates, he just sings brilliantly and affectingly - like his life depends on it. For all we know it does, on The Cost he seems to chisel heartfelt yearning into every lyric. On the rousing, achingly beautiful `Falling Slowly' Hansard sings "take this sinking boat.. and point it home.. we've still got time" It's a lyric that may not read all that impressively on paper, but in the lead-singer's hands such words become imbued with a ragged glory, and a fiery, down but-not-out sense of hope. This song, like several others on The Cost, builds to a thrilling climax, with sumptuous orchestration intertwining with Hansard's impassioned, world-weary delivery. As if to add balance, other tunes like `People Get Ready' are content just to simmer, without needing to come to the boil. Crucially, these tracks are no less riveting than the more anthemic, climactic ones, and therein lies the key to this albums success - a sustained beauty and intensity throughout.
Dripping with gorgeous melancholy and raw elegance, The Cost may be The Frames most compelling creation yet.
Like this? Try> Glen Hansard & Marketa Irglova - The Swell Season The Frames - Dance The Devil Damien Rice - 9
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