Satellite Stories - Phrases To Break The Ice -2012- May 2026

Yet, consistency is also the album’s greatest strength. In an era where streaming was beginning to fragment attention spans, Phrases to Break the Ice offered a cohesive mood. It was the perfect pre-game album, the soundtrack to a summer road trip where the windows are down and the destination is vague.

In "Small Talk," Mankinen sings, "We run on small talk / To keep the silence far away." This is the thesis of the entire record. It is an album about the fear of silence and the desperate, beautiful effort to fill the void with rhythm and riff. It is music for the "talking stage" of a relationship—that thrilling, unstable period before anything is real. Upon release, Phrases to Break the Ice performed respectably. It charted moderately in Finland and garnered heavy rotation on alternative radio in Japan and Germany. It did not conquer the world. But for those who found it, the album became a totem. Satellite Stories - Phrases To Break The Ice -2012-

The album’s title is its own best critique. These songs are the phrases you use when you are nervous, when you are trying to impress someone at a house party, or when you are walking someone home at 3 AM. They are not profound declarations of eternal love; they are clever, anxious, hopeful one-liners. Yet, consistency is also the album’s greatest strength

Yet, that is precisely what Satellite Stories delivered with their debut album, Phrases to Break the Ice . Released on November 23, 2012, via XYZ Entertainment, this 11-track, 37-minute sprint was more than just a debut; it was a mission statement. It was a sonic photograph of youthful urgency, a collection of phrases designed not just to break the ice, but to shatter it entirely. To understand the album, one must first understand the context. Satellite Stories—comprising Esa Mankinen (vocals/guitar), Olli-Pekka "Olli" Siltanen (guitar), Markku Heikkinen (bass), and Juho "Juhis" Karjalainen (drums)—grew up in a city where the sun doesn’t rise for nearly two months in winter. When the brief, explosive summer arrives, the cultural reaction is one of borderline manic celebration. In "Small Talk," Mankinen sings, "We run on