Ben Frost: By The ThroatHvalur 6
Bedroom Community Label
, 2009
Gatefold Digipak CD, Special Edition 12" Vinyl LP

I. Killshot 6:12
II. The Carpathians 2:57
III. O God Protect Me 2:55
IV. Híbakúsja 7:26
V. Untitled Transient 0:51
VI. Peter Venkman Pt I 4:30
VII. Peter Venkman Pt II 5:05
VIII. Leo Needs A New Pair Of Shoes 7:04
IX. Through The Glass Of The Roof 1:36
X. Through The Roof Of Your Mouth 4:35
XI. Through The Mouth Of Your Eye 2:49

Notes on BY THE THROAT

A cinematic sensibility pervades this album, whose darkly surreal sound- world owes as much to David Lynch as it does to David Lang. However the word "cinematic" is used to describe music so lazily and so often that it requires narrow definition before saying that Ben Frost's BY THE THROAT is HIGHLY "cinematic."

This album is expansive and borrows from the grandeur of cinema but stops short of using the clichéd symphonic gestures of hollywood in order to make its emotional points. Instead it is "cinematic" in the sense which harmonies are designed not to call attention to themselves, but to create an atmosphere of unease while focusing the audience's attention on a whole other level of drama.

Aside from the purely musical language of harmony and melody, like Amiina's strings on "Leo needs a new pair of shoes", there's the level of musique concrète; the weaving of nonmusical sounds into the musical fabric. We hear the snarling of wolves and the groaning of lions in “Killshot”, the microscopic clicking and whirring of hunting killer whales in "Through the roof of your mouth" and the unmistakable sound of a human gasping for breath in “Híbakúsja”. Then there's the sheer physical experience, the literally visceral effect of Frost's seismic rhythms and high-pitched shrieks on your body. These extra-harmonic elements are not just effects to punctuate the musical narrative in BY THE THROAT, but are integral, unifying motifs.

Borgar Magnason's menacing doublebass growls throughout BY THE THROAT, and is often so distorted it transforms the instrument into pure bestial noise, the brass choirs of "Peter Venkman" are recorded so closely that they almost transform into pure human breath. And just as these voices slide away from "notes" and "harmony" to become concrete sound-images—the meanings of these images rattle around and collide into each other, never truly representing each other or any one simple thing, but instead form a whole language of gasping and howling, gut-punching bass snarling metal.

And using this language—the way that, for instance, an auteur of surreal cinema might use a similarly layered, not-quite-distinct vocabulary of literal, symbolic, and abstract imagery—Frost tells a story we can't quite articulate, but which we can feel, profoundly and unmistakably.

-Adapted from liner notes by Daniel Johnson


Ben Frost took the spotlight and smashed it to pieces in 2007 with his breathtaking and critically acclaimed Lp Theory of Machines. Wire Magazine said "it is simply awesome--- this is Arvo Pärt as arranged by Trent Reznor", the BBC's Mary Anne Hobbs called it "arresting and exquisite". Boomkat named Frost "one of the most interesting and groundbreaking producers in the world today" and even went so far as to call Theory of Machines "the future of electronic music".

3 years later, Frost has returned with his second Lp for Bedroom Community, BY THE THROAT. Where Theory of Machines came sterilized in fluorescent light, BY THE THROAT is blood red and cloaked in shadow.


BY THE THROAT Produced by Ben Frost and Valgeir Sigurðsson (Björk, Coco Rosie, Bonnie 'Prince' Billy) Features performances by Amiina, The Arcade Fire's Jeremy Gara, the Swedish metal outfit Crowpath and composer Nico Muhly.


 
Ben Frost: Theory of MachinesBedroom Community Label, 2007
Special Edition Gatefold Digipak, CD Jewel Case, 12” Vinyl LP

1. Theory Of Machines 09:30
2. Stomp 08.27
3. We Love You Michael Gira 07:49
4. ...Coda 01:43
5. Forgetting You Is Like Breathing Water 11:13

From the ominous darkness and intensity of its opening moments, one might expect a death metal album to break out in an instant, but Theory of Machines is an album whose design is as symphonic as it is confrontational—the tempo doesn’t pick up, no hooks or vocals arrive, and when the drums finally kick in they’re as fragmented and corroded as they could possibly be and still resemble a groove.

In Theory of Machines, Ben Frost exploits every extreme of pitch, volume and timbre, the changes in this music sometimes seem as gradual as changes in the weather—and sometimes as violent. As the music changes it changes only in texture, colour and intensity so that the sense is not of something being created, altered or even developed, but of something already present being slowly illuminated.

-Adapted from the liner notes by Daniel Johnson

Simply awesome... Frost reminds us that minimalism was never just the polished sheen of Reich and Glass, but also the sweat and grime of Michael Gira's Swans...A deeper, darker minimalism- menacing and claustrophobic...

This is Arvo Pärt as arranged by Trent Reznor... Magnificent


- Wire Magazine, 2007



 
School of Emotional Engineering: Self TitledArchitecture Label, 2005
CD Jewel Case

1. To Be Continued… 06:15
2. …Refrain 04:24
3. Falling For Sylvia 08:02
4. Of Angel Dust… 05:52
5. …Refrain (Bloodline) 02:40
6. Redline 04:51
7. She Dreams In Car Crashes 08:30
8. Slicing The Skin Between My Toes 06:16



 
(Ben) Frost: Steel WoundRoom40 Label, 2003
Special Edition Double Gatefold Digipak, Special Edition

1. .011: Swarm 03:59
2. .014: ...I Lay My Ear To Furious Latin 09:10
3. .018: You, Me And The End Of Everything 10:34
4. .028: Steel Wound 09:19
5. .038: Last Exit To Brooklyn 06:51
6. .049: And I Watched You Breathe 07:14

Since his earliest days, Ben Frost has been fascinated by the cinematic qualities of the guitar. His output to this point has hinted at this, but with Steel Wound he makes a bold statement of intent.

In early 2003 Frost set up a remote studio at a derelict cabin overlooking the icy waters of Bass Strait Australia. With a constant wind flowing off the sea his only companion, Frost started work on a series of improvisations that would eventually become Steel Wound. Each of the pieces on Steel Wound is an epic journey, coloured with a deep sense of filmic narrative and suggested dialogues. The textural quality of the works, laced with field recordings and lost vocal fragments, sketches out the emotional soundscapes Frost had unwittingly gathered during his time at Johanna Beach. Each piece is a splintered fragment in time - a forgotten memory beautifully rediscovered in a moment of introspection.
- Lawrence English, September 2003

Seething washes of ambient noise, droning treated guitars and swelling compositions, littered like autumn leaves in the winter wind – cold, atmospheric and truly beautiful.
-Post Everything.com



 
Ben Frost: Poking Holes In Your ResearchIndependent Release, 2001
Original Edition of 250 copies, Hand stamped numbered CDR in Handmade Gatefold Sleeve. Later editions identified by a printed disc (Approx 2000 copies)

1. Poking Holes in your Research 04:07
2. Bleeding the Sacred Heart 06:22

Frost’s 2001 debut release, originally pressed in quantities of 250 copies until sold out and repressed again... Original pressings of this 6 song CDR EP featuring handmade gatefold packaging and handstamped, hand-labelled dics. Later editions are identified by a ‘printed’ disc.

Music For Sad Children was a surprise hit. Melancholy piano and musty slow beats, that early EP was equal parts bleak isolationism in the vein of Mick Harris’ Scorn project, and the reminiscent pastoralism of Boards Of Canada. Even as just a (first release) it was an excellent piece of work that managed to wring surprising emotion out of such a minimalist setup.
- Cyclic Defrost Magazine, June 2003



 
(Ben) Frost: Music For Sad ChildrenIndependent Release, 2001
Original Edition of 250 copies, Hand stamped numbered CDR in Handmade Gatefold Sleeve. Later editions identified by a printed disc (Approx 2000 copies)

1. Poking Holes in your Research 04:07
2. Bleeding the Sacred Heart 06:22
3. Hiding in the Ether 05:53
4. Age 13... With a Screwdriver 04:56
5. Understanding Why it Hurts 06:07
6. Allergy Eleven

Frost’s 2001 debut release, originally pressed in quantities of 250 copies until sold out and repressed again... Original pressings of this 6 song CDR EP featuring handmade gatefold packaging and handstamped, hand-labelled dics. Later editions are identified by a ‘printed’ disc.

Music For Sad Children was a surprise hit. Melancholy piano and musty slow beats, that early EP was equal parts bleak isolationism in the vein of Mick Harris’ Scorn project, and the reminiscent pastoralism of Boards Of Canada. Even as just a (first release) it was an excellent piece of work that managed to wring surprising emotion out of such a minimalist setup.
- Cyclic Defrost Magazine, June 2003