This is my fourth straight review released in 2023 or later. An interesting streak but one that is random, not by design.
Disc 1917 is…Through This Fire Across From Peter Balkan
Artist: The Mountain Goats
Year of Release: 2025
What’s up with the Cover? A painting of a fishboat and a lot of words. I spent a summer commercial fishing and can confirm that the folks out on the ocean for weeks at a time work damn hard so that the rest of us can enjoy shrimp cocktail or poached salmon at a fancy restaurant.
When I was a kid a shrimp cocktail felt like the height of opulence. Like you’d really arrived if you could sit in a restaurant and eat a bunch of shrimp out of a tall glass. I still think it’s pretty great.
But I digress…
How I Came To Know It: I have been a fan of the Mountain Goats (aka John Darnielle and friends) for many years. So many, I forget how I came to know them. I suspect it was around 2015 with “Beat the Champ” so by no means an original fan.
Anyway, I tend to give Darnielle a chance when he puts something new out, and that’s what happened here.
How It Stacks Up: The Mountain Goats have released 23 studio albums, and I have 14 of them. Of the 14 I have, “Through This Fire Across From Peter Balkan” (hereafter “Through This Fire…”) comes in dead last at #14.
Ratings: 2 stars
John Darnielle and the Mountain Goats love a theme album. I also love a theme album, just not “Through This Fire…” This album I do not love. Let’s talk about that.
I have just over half of the Mountain Goats albums, and I’ve seen them live. When I saw them live I realized there were some serious Mountain Goats fans out there the likes of which I could not match. “Sing along with every word” types that followed them town to town. Very cool, but the sort of thing I might do for Blue Oyster Cult or Frank Turner, but not much else.
All of which is to say I love the Mountain Goats, but not unconditionally. Which brings us here.
When an album begins with an overture, you better strap in tight, because it could get very ‘musical theatre’ very quickly. Darnielle loves themes, and on this record he basically writes a very weird very off-beat record that feels a lot like a musical.
With the exception of Les Miserables and maybe Chess, I hate musicals.
The plot of this particular bit of theatre was hard to unravel. The internet has a bunch of theories, but holding true to my “art should be experienced directly” approach, I quickly clicked away before I learned anything useful. On my limited listens (3) it felt like there was this guy on a fish boat and there was an accident and most of the crew drowned. Our hero lived, washed up and was changed by the experience. It gets a bit confusing in the second half but that might have just been me losing interest.
Darnielle has a talent for taking a hyper-specific experience and finding universal truths in it. He’s done this to good effect for wrestling (“Beat the Champ”), action films (“Bleed Out”) and even Dungeons & Dragons (“In League with Dragons”). I’m not sure he lands “fisherman has epiphany” with the same success.
There is some great imagery for sure. Darnielle is a hyper-talented wordsmith, and can generate a lot of emotional gravitas and complexity with just a few words. My favourite on this record is from “Cold at Night”:
“The first thing you learn is how strong you can be if you have to
And the next thing you learn is how cold it can get at night”
Good stuff, and one of the record’s better tracks, despite the presence of Lin- Manuel Miranda on backing vocals, who generally irritates me. Here he’s OK on the loose harmonies, but back to being annoying when he starts doing a delayed echo thing later in the song.
Darnielle’s voice, which has a high half-spoken quality that is somewhere between pop star and beat poet doesn’t work for everyone, but it works for me, and on “Through This Fire…” it worked again. No complaints there.
One of the better vocal moments lands with “Your Bandage” which has him at his softest lilt, drawing you in and making a tender moment out of someone reapplying someone’s bandage. It feels a bit out of place here, like it was meant for his 2022 album “Bleed Out”, except it was too soft, but I still loved it and it has one of the prettier song structures on the record.
That said, the melodies on this record overall are a bit stagnant for my tastes. Lots of small flairs and adjustments, which I’m sure to a jazz enthusiast would be welcomed for their subtle math. I am not a jazz enthusiast.
As for the arrangements, it is a mix of synth and strings and other what-not, but it mostly serves to feel like it was meant for an off-Broadway production, not a pop album. It is both overwrought and uninteresting at the same time.
Like I said at the start, I’m not a casual fan of the Mountain Goats, nor am I a zealot. Some records I have passed over without ever buying, and others are cherished favourites in my collection. “Through This Fire…” occupies that rare middle ground – a record I thought I liked enough to own, but upon further review, will be parting my company and going to a home of someone who will love it in a way that I do not.
Best tracks: Fishing Boat, Cold at Night, Your Bandage



