Fading Frontier
Fading Frontier is the seventh studio album by the American indie rock band Deerhunter, released on October 16, 2015, by the record label 4AD.[1] Recorded in Atlanta, Georgia, the album was produced by the band alongside Ben H. Allen III and features contributions from founding members Bradford Cox (vocals, guitar), Lockett Pundt (guitar, vocals), Moses Archuleta (drums, electronics), and bassist Josh McKay.[2] It marks a shift toward a brighter, more melodic sound, emphasizing clean guitars, broad harmonies, and midtempo grooves influenced by classic rock acts like R.E.M. and Tom Petty.[3] The album's creation followed Deerhunter's 2013 release Monomania and a serious car accident involving frontman Bradford Cox in December 2014, which left him hospitalized with serious injuries requiring a neck brace and subsequent depression.[4] Cox has described the incident as providing a "perspective-giving jolt" that influenced the record's themes of mortality, survival, and recovery, often delivered with dark, sarcastic undertones beneath its warm, plainspoken surface.[5] Notable production elements include guest synthesizer and tape manipulation by James Cargill of Broadcast on the track "Take Care," while songs like "Snakeskin" explore minimalist funk and "Ad Astra" offers a transcendent synth interlude.[2] Fading Frontier consists of nine tracks and received widespread critical acclaim for its professional polish and emotional depth, with Pitchfork awarding it an 8.4 out of 10 and designating it "Best New Music."[3] Reviewers praised its accessibility and maturity, positioning it as Deerhunter's most radio-friendly work to date, though some noted its understated approach compared to the band's earlier experimental output.[3]Track listing
- "All the Same"
- "Living My Life"
- "Breaker"
- "Duplex Planet"
- "Take Care"
- "Leather and Wood"
- "Snakeskin"
- "Ad Astra"
- "Carrion"[2]
Background and Recording
Development and Influences
The development of Fading Frontier was shaped by profound personal challenges for frontman Bradford Cox, who was struck by a car in Atlanta on December 4, 2014, resulting in serious injuries that required hospitalization and facial surgery.[4] This near-fatal accident triggered a period of deep depression for Cox, yet it ultimately influenced the album's emotional core, steering Deerhunter away from the raw aggression of their prior release Monomania toward warmer, more optimistic and reflective expressions of recovery and mortality.[3][4] Band dynamics also shifted significantly during this pre-recording phase, with longtime guitarist Frankie Broyles departing prior to recording to pursue his solo endeavors and collaborations, such as with the band Omni, leaving the group as a core trio of Cox, Lockett Pundt, and Moses Archuleta augmented by guest contributors like Tim Gane of Stereolab. This change fostered a more streamlined creative process, emphasizing melodic accessibility over the denser experimentation of past works. Artistic inspirations drew heavily from 1980s new wave and synth-pop, with Cox citing Australian band INXS as a key reference for the album's atmospheric grooves and satisfying songcraft, though adapted through Deerhunter's psychedelic lens.[6] This era's polished yet emotive style informed tracks like "Snakeskin," blending retro synth elements with introspective lyrics to enhance the record's hopeful sheen.[7] Complementing these modern influences, the album incorporated historical folk elements, notably in "Ad Astra," which samples the 1928 recording "I Wish I Was a Mole in the Ground" by Appalachian musician Bascom Lamar Lunsford, underscoring Deerhunter's evolution by weaving traditional American roots into their experimental soundscape.[8][9]Recording Sessions
The recording sessions for Fading Frontier occurred primarily at Maze Studios in Atlanta, Georgia, during May 2015.[10] Produced collaboratively by the band and Ben H. Allen III—who had previously worked with Deerhunter on their 2010 album Halcyon Digest—the sessions emphasized a polished, direct sonic approach that departed from the raw, lo-fi textures of the band's prior release Monomania.[3] This high-fidelity production highlighted crisp guitar strums, layered harmonies, and subtle instrumentation, creating a brighter, more accessible sound palette.[3] The core band members handled the majority of instrumentation: Bradford Cox on vocals and guitar, Lockett Pundt on guitar and vocals, Moses Archuleta on drums and additional production elements, and Josh McKay on bass.[2] These sessions continued with McKay, who had joined as bassist for the band's 2013 album Monomania following the departure of Josh Fauver in 2012. Guest contributions added distinctive electronic textures, including Tim Gane of Stereolab providing electronic harpsichord on "Duplex Planet," which infused the track with a vintage, ornate flair reminiscent of 1960s pop arrangements.[11] James Cargill of Broadcast also contributed synthesizers and tape loops to "Take Care," enhancing its atmospheric depth.[11] The production timeline was influenced by Cox's recovery from a severe car accident in December 2014, which hospitalized him and shaped the album's introspective tone as a motivational catalyst for the band's return to recording.[4] Mixing took place at Maze Studios in Atlanta, with mastering completed shortly thereafter to prepare for the October 2015 release.[10]Personnel Contributions
The seventh studio album by Deerhunter, Fading Frontier, featured the band's core lineup consisting of Bradford Cox on vocals, guitar, synthesizer, and bass; Lockett Pundt on guitar, vocals, and synthesizer; Moses Archuleta on drums, percussion, and synthesizer; and Josh McKay on bass.[11][12] This configuration continued from the band's previous album Monomania, with McKay having replaced Josh Fauver who had departed in 2012.[13] Additional musicians contributed to select tracks, enhancing the album's textural diversity. Tim Gane of Stereolab provided electronic harpsichord on "Duplex Planet," while James Cargill of Broadcast added synthesizers and tape manipulations on "Take Care." Zumi Rosow contributed treated alto saxophone on "Snakeskin."[11][3] Songwriting credits were primarily attributed to Cox for tracks including "All the Same," "Living My Life," "Breaker," "Leather and Wood," "Snakeskin," and "Carrion," with Pundt serving as the primary writer for "Duplex Planet," "Take Care," and "Ad Astra."[11][14] The album's production was handled collaboratively by the band and Ben H. Allen III, who also oversaw mixing at Maze Studios in Atlanta, Georgia.[11][12] Engineering duties were led by Jason Kingsland, with additional recording by Jeff Fisher on "Duplex Planet" and Sumner Jones on various tracks.[15] Mastering was performed by Joe LaPorta at Sterling Sound in New York.[12]Musical Style and Themes
Musical Elements
Fading Frontier represents a polished evolution in Deerhunter's sound, leaning into indie rock with significant synth-pop and dream pop influences, characterized by catchy melodic hooks and production evoking 1980s aesthetics.[16] The album's sonic palette emphasizes clarity and warmth, moving away from the experimental noise of earlier works toward straightforward pop structures with shimmering, accessible arrangements.[17] This shift is evident in the crisp, sunlit production that allows songs to breathe without excessive distortion or feedback.[16] Synthesizers play a central role, providing glossy, atmospheric layers that submerge or elevate tracks, often paired with reverb effects like gated snare drums to create a stadium-rock sheen reminiscent of the 1980s.[16] Guitars contribute chiming, jangly tones rather than fuzz, fostering dreamy harmonies and subtle psych-noise accents within a more ethereal framework.[17] This contrasts sharply with the raw, gritty energy of Monomania, opting instead for scrubbed, vibrant textures that highlight melodic interplay between band members.[18] The album spans 9 tracks over a concise 36-minute runtime, prioritizing tight songwriting and conventional structures over extended experimentation.[19] For instance, "Snakeskin" drives with a slithering funky groove and garage rock energy, incorporating adventurous sonic textures like a kaleidoscopic tapestry of effects.[17][20] Similarly, "Breaker" merges dreamy pop harmonies with shoegaze-inspired walls of effects, showcasing vocal interplay amid synth-submerged arrangements.[18][16]Lyrical Content and Themes
The lyrics of Fading Frontier delve into themes of personal recovery and resilience, heavily influenced by frontman Bradford Cox's 2014 car accident, which left him with a broken jaw and subsequent depression treated with antidepressants.[5][21] This experience prompted a shift toward introspection, with Cox describing the album as reflecting a "more comfortable place" after periods of mania and isolation.[5] Escapism emerges as a core motif, portraying a desire for disconnection from societal pressures, as in the line from "Living My Life" where the narrator declares, "I'm off the grid, I'm out of range," symbolizing a retreat to personal safety and quiet.[5][6] Suburban ennui permeates the record, evoking a domesticated ennui through references to mundane routines and temporary comforts, underscoring a mature acceptance of life's impermanence.[21][6] The lyrics blend abstract introspection with optimism tempered by melancholy, often drawing from personal yet muted experiences to explore emotional duality. In "All the Same," Cox addresses loss and acceptance through imagery of emptiness—"Hollowed out"—while advising to "take your handicaps / Channel them and feed them back / Till they become your strengths," transforming vulnerability into empowerment.[22][23] This resigned refrain of "It's all the same" conveys a philosophical equanimity toward change and discomfort, aligning with the album's broader meditation on mortality and renewal.[24] Cox has noted that such lines arise spontaneously "from nowhere," maintaining an elusive quality that invites interpretation without overt autobiography.[22] Recurring motifs infuse the lyrics with folk and sci-fi elements, enhancing their conceptual depth. Space exploration features in "Ad Astra," written by guitarist Lockett Pundt and translating to "to the stars," evoking a cosmic yearning amid synth-driven introspection and a sampled folk standard, "I Wish I Was a Mole in the Ground," which grounds the ethereal in rooted Americana.[21][23] Transformation appears in "Snakeskin," where Cox sings of being "born already nailed to the cross," implying a shedding of past burdens like illness and loneliness for fragile renewal.[25][23] These motifs draw from Southern religious undertones and speculative fiction, creating a tapestry of escape and reinvention.[22] Cox's vocal delivery on Fading Frontier evolves to a warmer, more direct phrasing, contrasting his earlier abstract, obtuse styles on albums like Monomania.[5] This intimacy fosters a sense of conversational resilience, as heard in the gentle resolve of "Living My Life," where lyrics affirm survival amid fading ambitions: "I've spent all of my time chasing a fading frontier."[5] The approach reflects post-accident stability, prioritizing emotional clarity over prior abrasiveness.[6]Release and Promotion
Announcement and Singles
Deerhunter announced their seventh studio album, Fading Frontier, on August 16, 2015, following a countdown timer that appeared on the band's official website and was shared via social media starting on August 14.[26][27] The announcement revealed an October 16 release date through 4AD and included the album's tracklist and artwork details.[28] The lead single, "Snakeskin", was released the following day on August 17, accompanied by a music video directed by Valentina Tapia, featuring psychedelic visuals of the band performing in distorted, colorful environments.[29][11] Follow-up singles included "Breaker" on September 15, 2015, with a video directed by frontman Bradford Cox in collaboration with guitarist Lockett Pundt, depicting layered superimpositions of the band members blending into one another amid warm, fading transitions.[30][31] The third single, "Living My Life", arrived on October 13, 2015, just days before the album's release, featuring another Cox-directed video that portrays the band in an idyllic rural setting with macro shots of nature, dedicated to Miles Davis.[32][33] The album's cover art features "Zuma #25" (1978/2006), a photograph by John Divola from his series documenting an abandoned house vandalized and decayed on Zuma Beach, California, evoking themes of isolation through its stark, abstract desert-like desolation.[26][8]Marketing and Tour
Fading Frontier was released on October 16, 2015, by the record label 4AD in multiple physical and digital formats, including CD, standard black vinyl LP, and digital download.[1] The album's promotion included a series of interviews with frontman Bradford Cox, who discussed its creative evolution and influences. In a September 2015 interview with Grantland, Cox highlighted the impact of 1980s new wave acts like INXS on the record's melodic and rhythmic elements, describing how their polished sound informed Deerhunter's shift toward more accessible structures.[6] These conversations, often conducted in the lead-up to release, emphasized the band's intentional move away from the raw intensity of prior works toward warmer, more introspective tones. To support the album, Deerhunter embarked on an extensive tour beginning in late 2015, spanning North America and Europe with performances at major venues and festivals.[34] The setlists prominently featured tracks from Fading Frontier, such as "Living My Life," "Breaker," and "Duplex Planet," alongside selections from earlier albums like "Helicopter" and "Revival" to showcase the band's evolving catalog.[35] The tour, which ran through early 2016, included stops in cities like Los Angeles, Boston, Paris, and Glasgow, often with Atlas Sound—Cox's side project—as the opening act.[36] Promotion extended to tie-in merchandise, including album-themed apparel such as T-shirts and posters sold at shows and through official channels, alongside pushes for streaming accessibility.[37] The full album was made available for streaming on platforms like Spotify ahead of and upon release, facilitating early listens and playlist integrations to broaden reach among indie rock audiences.[38] This digital emphasis complemented the physical formats, aligning with 4AD's strategy to engage fans across media.Reception and Legacy
Initial Critical Reviews
Upon its release in October 2015, Fading Frontier by Deerhunter garnered widespread critical acclaim, with reviewers frequently highlighting its shift toward a warmer, more accessible sound compared to the band's previous album, Monomania (2013). The album's aggregate score on Metacritic stood at 81 out of 100, based on 28 reviews, earning the site's designation of "universal acclaim."[39] Pitchfork awarded the album 8.4 out of 10, designating it "Best New Music" and commending its "content, warm, and plainspoken" quality as a serene response to frontman Bradford Cox's near-fatal car accident in 2014, contrasting sharply with Monomania's "grotty, pissed-off" aggression.[3] NME delivered a perfect 5 out of 5 stars, praising the record's melodic evolution and its successful fusion of experimental dream-pop elements with broad pop appeal, describing it as the band's "most direct, unflinching" work to date. Similarly, The Guardian rated it 4 out of 5 stars, emphasizing its poppiest and most accessible incarnation yet, with "soaring melodies" and "confident sunlit arrangements" that masked underlying disquiet.[16] Critics commonly celebrated the album's balance between Deerhunter's signature experimentation—such as eclectic synth textures and white-funk grooves—and an increased pop sensibility that made it radio-friendly without sacrificing emotional depth.[3] This evolution from Monomania's raw intensity was seen as a mature step, reflecting themes of recovery and resignation while maintaining the band's atmospheric intrigue.[16] However, some reviews pointed to minor shortcomings; for instance, Drowned in Sound gave it 8 out of 10, critiquing its occasional conventionality and perceived lack of innovation relative to the band's earlier, more boundary-pushing efforts like Halcyon Digest (2010).[40] Slant Magazine echoed this in its 4 out of 5 stars assessment, warning that the polished production risked rendering the album "safe or predictable" despite its serene soundscapes.[41]Accolades and Rankings
Fading Frontier earned widespread critical acclaim in year-end rankings for 2015, appearing in several prominent publications' lists of the best albums of the year. It placed at number 30 on Pitchfork's list of the 50 best albums of 2015.[42] The album ranked number 29 on NME's Albums of the Year 2015.[43] Similarly, it was positioned at number 12 on The Guardian's best albums of 2015.[44] The album was also included in other notable end-of-year selections, such as number 47 on Mojo's top 50 albums of 2015 and number 55 on Uncut's top 75 albums of 2015.[45] It appeared at number 50 on Rough Trade's Albums of the Year 2015, highlighting its recognition within indie music circles.[46] Despite this strong showing in critical polls, Fading Frontier did not secure any major award wins, though it received nominations and shortlistings in various indie-focused year-end accolades, including Rough Trade's selection. In comparison to contemporaries, it ranked below Tame Impala's Currents, which topped Pitchfork's list and placed fifth on NME's, but outperformed it on The Guardian's chart at number 15.[42][43][44]Long-Term Impact and Retrospectives
Over the decade following its release, Fading Frontier has been recognized as a pivotal influence on the evolution of indie rock, particularly in facilitating a shift toward synth-driven accessibility in the late 2010s. The album's blend of psychedelic elements with polished, melodic structures inspired subsequent acts seeking to balance experimentation with broader appeal, as noted in analyses of the genre's trajectory during that period.[3] In 2025, marking the album's 10th anniversary, retrospective coverage underscored its enduring significance. MAGNET magazine highlighted Fading Frontier as an "essential" work in Deerhunter's catalog, emphasizing its role in the band's maturation.[47] Similarly, a Fluxblog interview with the band in June 2025 reflected on the record's consistency, positioning it as a serene yet distinct entry in their discography that avoided the hysteria of prior releases while maintaining high quality.[48] Fan communities have actively commemorated these milestones, with discussions on platforms like Reddit's r/indieheads and r/deerhunter for the 8th anniversary in 2023 and 10th in 2025 focusing on appreciation for the album's themes of recovery and personal resilience, often tied to frontman Bradford Cox's own experiences. This grassroots engagement has contributed to a renewed interest, amplifying its cultural resonance beyond initial reception. More broadly, Fading Frontier is regarded as a transitional album in Deerhunter's oeuvre, bridging their earlier experimental noise phase—exemplified by works like Monomania—with the more refined, mature output that followed, such as Why Hasn't Everything Already Disappeared?. This perception has fueled a streaming resurgence in the 2020s, with the record gaining traction among newer listeners via platforms like Spotify, where its accessible synth-pop leanings align with contemporary indie playlists.[3]Commercial Performance
Chart Positions
Fading Frontier debuted at number 72 on the US Billboard 200 chart for the week ending November 7, 2015.[49] It also reached number 10 on the Billboard Independent Albums chart.[50] The album peaked at number 53 on the UK Albums Chart.[51] In Belgium, it achieved a peak of number 75 on the Ultratop Flanders albums chart[52] and number 89 on the Ultratop Wallonia albums chart.[53] Additionally, it reached number 48 on the Scottish Albums Chart.[54]| Chart (2015) | Peak Position |
|---|---|
| US Billboard 200 | 72 |
| US Independent Albums (Billboard) | 10 |
| UK Albums (OCC) | 53 |
| Scottish Albums (OCC) | 48 |
| Belgian Albums (Ultratop Flanders) | 75 |
| Belgian Albums (Ultratop Wallonia) | 89 |
Sales and Certifications
Fading Frontier achieved modest commercial success typical of indie rock releases on the 4AD label. In its first week following the October 16, 2015 release, the album sold a modest number of units in the United States, consistent with its chart debut. By the end of 2016, cumulative US sales reflected sustained interest among the band's core audience through a mix of physical, digital, and download formats.[2] The album did not attain major certifications, such as RIAA Gold for 500,000 units, highlighting the challenges faced by independent labels in reaching mainstream thresholds despite strong niche performance.[55] Streaming metrics have grown substantially over time, largely due to algorithmic playlist placements that introduced the album to new listeners.[56] Internationally, sales remained limited, aligning with the album's cult following rather than broad commercial breakthrough.[51]Track Listing
Standard Edition Tracks
The standard edition of Fading Frontier comprises nine tracks with a total runtime of 36:04. All tracks were produced by Ben H. Allen III and the band Deerhunter. Songwriting is credited to frontman Bradford Cox, except for "Ad Astra" written by Lockett Pundt.[11]| No. | Title | Duration | Writer(s) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | "All the Same" | 3:05 | Bradford Cox |
| 2 | "Living My Life" | 3:49 | Bradford Cox |
| 3 | "Breaker" | 3:31 | Bradford Cox |
| 4 | "Duplex Planet" | 2:40 | Bradford Cox |
| 5 | "Take Care" | 4:12 | Bradford Cox |
| 6 | "Leather and Wood" | 5:55 | Bradford Cox |
| 7 | "Snakeskin" | 4:20 | Bradford Cox |
| 8 | "Ad Astra" | 5:32 | Lockett Pundt |
| 9 | "Carrion" | 3:00 | Bradford Cox |