Junior Boys - Waiting Game Music Album Reviews

Junior Boys - Waiting Game Music Album Reviews
The Canadian duo cuts out drums and vocals from long stretches of their first album in six years. That it feels of a piece with their past work is a testament to the solid foundation of their music.

Junior Boys open Waiting Game, their first album in six years, on an airless, pristinely recorded drone that only gradually fills out into a chord. A fretless bass murmurs and moans; knowing Jeremy Greenspan, we expect him to slick his hair back and indulge in some David Sylvian suavity. But nope: After almost four minutes of weightless, watery atmosphere, he sings the song’s titular phrase, “Must be all the wrong things,” exactly once. The echo on his voice cuts like a contrail through the otherwise static arrangement, and soon enough, we’re back to silence.

If this seems like a curveball, imagine how shocking it would’ve been in the mid-2000s, after the Canadians dropped their 2004 debut, Last Exit. That record was descended from urbane, rock-averse bands like Pet Shop Boys and the Human League but decked out with all the post-Y2K rhythmic trickery of UK garage, microhouse, drum’n’bass, and the stripped-back productions of Timbaland and the Neptunes. Since then, Greenspan and co-producer Matt Didemus have absorbed more styles from across the dance-music spectrum into their sound, climaxing with the grand disco throb and Prince-ly avant-pop experiments of 2016’s Big Black Coat. Through all this omnivorousness, Greenspan’s voice keeps everything rooted in the exquisite, silk-sheets melancholy that makes their music so absorbing.

Because ambient music often conjures the same sort of wistfulness—particularly the jazzy, neo-Balearic type they seem to be going for here, redolent of Gigi Masin and Suzanne Kraft—the excision of drums from large stretches of Waiting Game doesn’t radically change the experience of listening to their music. It has the Junior Boys feel, but Greenspan needs fewer words to bring it into being. “It Never Occurred to Me” consists mostly of small pops and fizzles of vocoder over a hint of a techno beat, and the lyric sheet reads “lyrics are incomprehensible.” “Dum Audio” is sung in Latin—not that you’d know, given how many effects are slathered on Greenspan’s voice. “Fidget” is just a pearly synth lead and a low-end gurgle; it’s to this album what “Mermaid” was to Sade’s Love Deluxe, an instrumental that proves the band can conjure its trademark vibe even without anyone at the mic.

In creating a Junior Boys album that suggests more than it delivers, Greenspan applies some of the tricks from Oh No, the fantastic album he co-produced with Jessy Lanza not long after the release of Big Black Coat. “Dum Audio” is full of the same playful, spooky synth stabs and dissonant chords he used to bring tension to Lanza’s “It Means I Love You” as it built to the mind-melting drum freakout at its climax. Hollow-sounding vintage drum machines putter in the background, and anyone who’s heard “In the Air Tonight” can tell you how foreboding a Roland CR-78 left unattended can be. The only time the album’s impressionistic palette works against it is on “Thinking About You Calms Me Down,” whose big pop hook would hit a lot harder if the duo had set it to a beat instead of simply hinting at one.

Even in the absence of many of their trademarks, Waiting Game feels of a piece with what Greenspan and Didemus have done before, but it’s hard to shake how small it feels. Junior Boys usually keep their albums around 50 minutes, long enough to let their ideas develop along the x-axis of their beats but short enough to be digestible in one sitting. Waiting Game, meanwhile, sits at 37 minutes. It’s as if Greenspan and Didemus started with a standard Junior Boys album and snipped away at whatever they found worth cutting—a drumbeat here, a lyric here, a song there. The result is an album defined largely by what it lacks compared to the band’s past work: a reduction rather than an expansion. Waiting Game proves the duo can conjure their trademark atmosphere without many of their usual tools, but it’s harder to identify what their music gains from losing them.

CORRECTION: A previous version of this review erroneously stated that Jeremy Greenspan produced Jessy Lanza’s 2016 album Oh No. In fact, Greenspan co-produced the album with Lanza.
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About Wanni Arachchige Udara Madusanka Perera

Hey, I'm Perera! I will try to give you technology reviews(mobile,gadgets,smart watch & other technology things), Automobiles, News and entertainment for built up your knowledge.
Junior Boys - Waiting Game Music Album Reviews Junior Boys - Waiting Game Music Album Reviews Reviewed by Wanni Arachchige Udara Madusanka Perera on November 04, 2022 Rating: 5

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