When It's Cold I'd Like To Die
by Moby

Album: Everything Is Wrong (1995)
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Songfacts®:

  • "When It's Cold I'd Like to Die," featuring vocalist Mimi Goese, was released as the closing track on Moby's 1995 album Everything Is Wrong. Never issued as a single and conspicuously lacking drums, it was initially overlooked, which only makes its slow, unlikely rise one of the stranger afterlives in modern music.
  • When Moby wrote "When It's Cold I'd Like to Die," he was living in an abandoned factory, fresh off a breakup, with a studio that barely had heat. The first version he sent to his A&R contact consisted only of strings - no drums - prompting concern both about the arrangement and about Moby's mental wellbeing. "Are you okay?" the A&R rep asked after seeing the title.

    At the suggestion that the piece might benefit from vocals, Moby reached out to Mimi Goese, formerly of the experimental New York band Hugo Largo. Expecting a polite refusal, he was surprised when she agreed. Goese recorded her vocals in a single take, using a cheap microphone in Moby's Lower East Side studio.
  • Despite its title, Moby said the song's "cold" refers less to the absence of warmth, love, or connection. Fans have long interpreted it as a meditation on depression, burnout, or quiet resignation. Others hear it as the perspective of someone near death, no longer wishing to be kept alive at all costs. The song never clarifies, and that ambiguity is part of its power.
  • Placed quietly at the end of Everything Is Wrong, the song seemed destined to remain obscure. But over the years it was slowly discovered, first by filmmaker Dean DeBlois, co-director of Lilo & Stitch and the How to Train Your Dragon films. He wrote an entire screenplay inspired by this song and later contacted Moby about it.

    Moby said this was when he realized the track had a deep, if quiet, impact on individual listeners, even if it was not widely known yet.
  • Long after 1995, the song began to surface in prominent TV placements. It first appeared on The Sopranos, closing the episode "Join the Club," where its hushed, suspended mood underscored themes of trauma and limbo.

    "When It's Cold I'd Like to Die" twice resurfaced on Stranger Things:

    In Season 1, Episode 8 ("The Upside Down"), playing over the harrowing sequence in which Joyce and Hopper find Will and perform CPR in a desperate attempt to bring him back to life.

    in Season 4, Episode 9 ("The Piggyback"), this time accompanying the climactic moments surrounding Max's near-death experience and Eddie's death, deliberately echoing the imagery and emotional weight of the Season 1 resuscitation scene.

    In both series, music supervisors used the track as a sonic shorthand for liminal, near-death states, and those carefully chosen syncs introduced the song to millions of viewers worldwide, dramatically boosting its profile, streams, and long-term recognition.
  • The transformation of "When It's Cold I'd Like to Die" from forgotten ambient ballad to cultural touchstone baffles Moby. "It was an obscure, very sort of like melodic, pretty heartbreaking piece of music at the end of an obscure record," he reflected. "And I just am so surprised anyone ever listened to it... It's gone from being quiet and weird and obscure and heartbreaking to being the most successful song that I have."
  • Moby released an orchestral reworking of "When It's Cold I'd Like to Die" featuring Jacob Lusk of Gabriels on vocals on January 16, 2026.

    "Like anyone who's heard Jacob sing, I immediately fell in love with his voice," Moby shared. "After hearing him sing on the radio, I spent weeks tracking him down and begging him to work with me. And, lucky me, he agreed."

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