Love Kicked and Still Kicking: A Retrospective on The Shivers’ Debut Charades
/Only One On The Mountain
“Give to me your soul.”
I couldn’t tell you exactly when or where I first heard The Shivers’ 2004 debut album Charades. I don’t remember first pressing play, and I don’t know if it was love at first spin or if it just slowly seeped through my skin, a drop more with every listen. In a lot of ways, it feels like it’s always been there, that I’ve always loved it. It’s hard to imagine a version of me that is not partly Charades.
NPR lists Aaron Paul and Daniel Radcliffe as noted fans of the band, so it’s possible that I first heard it through one of their endorsements. In a profile with Details, Paul reported that before his wedding to Lauren Parsekian in 2013, he tracked down The Shivers’ frontman Keith Zarriello to perform “Beauty” at the ceremony, joined by the entire guest list, all of whom he had emailed the song to in advance with instructions to learn the lyrics and sing along. The performance reportedly caused Parsekian to weep “in the most beautiful way ever.” And if that’s not a ringing endorsement, I don’t know what is.
“Maybe someday you’ll be gay.”
Throughout The Shivers’ tenure, Zarriello has been joined by a rotating cast of band members. At the time of Charades, the band consisted of Brian Factor, Cesar Alvarez, and Cameron Hull. There’s not a whole lot of biographical details to be found on Mr. Zarriello, but there is one very important fact to understand about the mastermind behind Charades before any further discussion: he is from New York. City, that is. The Big Apple. Apparently he lived in Montreal for some indeterminate amount of time, but ultimately returned to the city, as all New Yorkers do, or so I’ve been told.
“You’re beautiful / Why would you wanna die?”
Charades begins with the title track, which is just the final minute and a half of the record reversed, though you might not guess it even after several listens. “Charades” stands quite singularly as a gentle, flowing current that guides you to the first real song on the album, “L.I.E.” It’s here where the listener is introduced to the heart of the record, that being Zarriello’s gentle, drawling, emotively inflected, deliberately annunciated, crooning vocals. His ear for a timeless melody is matched only by those whose melodies have already been time-tested. Though you might be tempted to call his lyrics poetic, you will be quickly corrected when he asserts, “I’m not a poet and I’m not a clown / I just think these things and then I write them down.” Fair enough, Keith.
This heart, despite its lively pulse, wouldn’t be half as effective without the album’s lungs: the fuzzy, possessive, tight yet embryonic guitars that gust the album forward even in the moments when Zarriello’s voice sounds like it might crack, shatter, combust, or dissolve.
“We’re on the beaches of Ibiza, baby.”
Let’s check out the package itself. The album’s cover features a black-and-white photograph of Zarriello bundled up in a coat and hat, his hands nested deeply in his pockets. The photo is bordered by the name of the band above and the name of the album below on a simple white backdrop. You might be pointed toward a cold, wintery sound from this (and not wrongly so!), but on second glance, you might also note that our main man is backed by a chorus of swim-trunked and topless beachgoers. It’s a fitting contrast. As frosted and numb as the record can be, it is equally embodied, if not triumphed, by a transcendent, smoggy, campfire warmth, like the hot air flowing out of a Brooklyn subway grate battling with the harsh December chill.
It would be hard to overstate the range present on Charades. For every gorgeously constructed love ballad (of which there is an abundance on this record and through the rest of The Shivers’ catalog), there is a tonally polar, haggard and swaggering cut like “The Ghetto” or “SoHo Party,” the latter of which might encapsulate that variety better than any other. That track opens with a voicemail message from Zarriello’s mother (presumably to a much younger Keith) telling him to get his room ready for the painters. This is followed by a metronomic procession of dissonant key stabs and the lyrics “Get your face out of my vagina / and get those balls off my tits / I really am not liking any of this” before it concludes with an interpolation of Cat Stevens’ enchanting 1971 album opener “The Wind.”
Zarriello’s influences are no more obscured through the rest of the record, which includes a rendition of Leonard Cohen’s “Chelsea Hotel #2.” These two artists, along with Tom Waits, whose influence accounts for some of the album’s gritty underbelly, might be the nearest touchpoints for new listeners, but be assured, none of them could have made these songs or this record work like Keith Zarriello could. For a more contemporary relation, Zarriello’s tastefully off-kilter, multi-tracked style of production recall a Microphones-era Phil Elverum, had he a morsel less mopiness and an additional fistful of Lou Reed-esque swagger.
“Oh it seems I was Moses / You were Jesus Christ.”
What makes Charades so remarkable is that all of it works. Twenty songs (the Bandcamp version is missing two tracks, and the vinyl reissue even more), nearly 70 minutes, and not a moment wasted. It is an album of ideas, and every one of them pays off, from the New York lowlife anthems (“Violence” and “The Ghetto”) to the lullabies (“Sunshine”) to the should-be-out-of-place electronica tune (“Bedroomer”) and all the love songs that range from bitter (“I Could Care Less”) to sweet (“Roses”) to wistful (“Maybe, Baby”) to devotional (“Kisses”) to make-all-your-wedding-attendees-memorize-the-words (“Beauty”).
Zarriello’s Handwritten tracklist
These love songs are not easy. They clutch, knead, scratch, and gnaw at the heart, the throat, the eyes, and anywhere else they can get inside. They ache. Even those on the sweeter side are rife with an awareness that, regardless of how this ends, it will hurt. They’re written by someone who loves the pain—is addicted, maybe—someone who has loved and spit and shrieked, who has kicked and been kicked and just keeps crawling back for more. Keith Zarriello is a lover.
For the most part, all these songs are fairly simple, at least insofar as someone like Leonard Cohen wrote simple songs. Vocals and guitar, some New York ambience. Drums when necessary, and the occasional keyboard or tape loop. No song has more or less than what it needs, and what it needs, it gets in its most unadulterated form, from the fragile, tape-warbly guitars of “Maybe, Baby” to the trip hop backbeat of “Violence” to the swinging, speakeasy piano and horns on “The Ghetto.”
“Hasidic Jews are praying in the corner of the ghetto parking garage.”
There’s a curious sort of restraint on Charades, but that’s not quite right. It might be better put that Zarriello sounds perfectly at home here. He doesn’t need to put out or prove anything to anyone; this is his house, this is his city, and these are his songs (even the Cohen cover). Whether you like it here or not, he couldn’t care less.
By all reason, you should be unequivocally correct to think it would be jarring to hear lines like “I could stare at a white woman’s hair / or a black woman’s rear end and thighs / I could surmise in my disguise / that your Puerto Rican eyes tell lies” in any context, but once again, that is the shivery magic of our host at play: it all works, and it all works so damn well. Charades is lustful, pious, gentle, violent, desperate, and entirely, utterly inimitable. Keith Zarriello might not be a poet, but he very well may be a poem.
Admittedly, it’s hard for me to find any fault with a record like this that has been such a warm and reliable companion to me through so many of my formative years. Considering that, I’d like to leave you with one last selling point, one entirely removed from any of my own biases: Aaron Paul and Lauren Parsekian remain married to this day, twelve years later, so if you’re out looking for your long and lasting love, start here.
Amber Graci may be found on Instagram at @amber.gray.sea and @amberwavesnc, the latter of which is reserved for her literary and musical endeavors. She may be spotted enjoying music, playing music, and depositing chapbooks of her writings at local venues, bookshops, bars, and homes in the areas within and surrounding Charlotte, North Carolina. She hopes to have more music available in some not-too-distant future at https://amberwaves.bandcamp.com/music.