Named in honor of a passage from Pauline Reage's infamous novel The Story of O, the melancholy
Trembling Blue Stars heralded the return of singer/songwriter
Robert Wratten, best known as the frontman of the British indie pop band
the Field Mice. Ostensibly a solo project with significant input from producer
Ian Catt,
Trembling Blue Stars originally emerged in the wake of the dissolution of
Northern Picture Library, the project
Wratten mounted after the demise of
the Field Mice with then-girlfriend
Annemari Davies; 1996's Shinkansen label debut
Her Handwriting explored the couple's breakup in heartbreaking lyrical detail, couching its elegiac songs in airy, evocative guitar soundscapes. As of 1998's
Lips That Taste of Tears, some measure of reconciliation had apparently been reached, as
Davies' ethereal vocal presence again surfaced. 2000's
Broken by Whispers was issued in the U.S. on Sub Pop. That same year the band added
Keris Howard (formerly of
Brighter) on bass,
Beth Arzy (formerly of
Aberdeen) on backing vocals, and
Jonathan Akerman on drums, and began playing live shows in the U.K. before journeying to the U.S. for the first time. With the help of another Sarah Records vet,
Harvey Williams of
Another Sunny Day, this same core group recorded 2001's
Alive to Every Smile. Since then the band's lineup remained stable, but they left their longtime label, Shinkansen, and moved to Spanish indie Elefant before the release of 2004's The Seven Autumn Flowers. Bar/None released the album in the U.S., and the band returned for a few dates to promote the album. After the release of the
Bathed in Blue EP in early 2005, the group recorded and released their sixth album, 2007's
The Last Holy Writer.
Wratten announced shortly before the release of their next album 2010's Fast Trains and Telegraph Wires, that it would be the group's last.
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Jason Ankeny & Tim Sendra, Rovi