Oliver Semple
Beautiful, poetic, cynical lyrics. Would have made the charts in the 90's. Love it.
Favorite track: Wee Guys (Bobby's Got a Punctured Lung).
Tim Mee
Wonderfully acerbic and yet lovable. Like Kenny 'King Creosote' Anderson singing with an acoustic Wave Pictures. 'Who Does Susan think she is' with its female lead vocals also has that endearing 'Fence Records' vibe.
Favorite track: Hey Ho, Let's Not Go.
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Digifile CD with lyrics insert.
Includes unlimited streaming of The Private Memoirs and Confessions of The Just Joans
via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more.
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Acerbic yet winsome Scottish indiepoppers The Just Joans return with the dazzlingly maudlin The Private Memoirs and Confessions of the Just Joans, a deeply personal collection of songs that hazily recall the past and contemplate the futility of the future.
A titular twist on the classic gothic horror novel The Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified Sinner by compatriot James Hogg, the new album is the follow-up to 2017’s You Might Be Smiling Now… and contains the kind of melodies and mockery that led Uncut to class the band as the point at which “Stephin Merritt lies down with The Vaselines.”
At the forefront remain the mischievous lyrics and heartfelt vocals of siblings David and Katie Pope, aided and abetted by Chris Elkin on lead guitar, Fraser Ford on bass guitar and Jason Sweeney on drums. Yet it is the recruitment of multi-instrumentalist Arion Xenos and guest appearance of Butcher Boy’s Alison Eales to arrange strings that have helped elevate the band’s music to new heights.
Their progression is most noticeable on lead single “Dear Diary, I Died Again today”, a painfully beautiful admission of everyday anxiety and “When Nietzsche Calls”, the triumphant cry of a spurned lover revelling in the misery of their ex to a backdrop of trumpets and violins. The juxtaposition of the fragility shown in these tracks with the menace of “Wee Guys (Bobby’s Got A Punctured Lung)” – an observation and understanding of the casual violence that once cast a shadow over the band’s hometown – highlights The Just Joans’ ability to seamlessly flip between sensitivity and danger, and sums up why Highway Queens described them as the “perfect Glasgow kiss.”
The Private Memoirs and Confessions of the Just Joans is a veritable smorgasbord of misery, longing and unrequited love; stories of small town resentments, half-forgotten school friends, failing relationships and awkward workplace conversations. As David explains: “It’s a collection torn from the pages of the diary I haven’t kept over the past 25 years. There are songs about places and people I vaguely remember, feelings I think that I once may have felt and the onset of middle-aged ennui.”
Despite entering new territory with the addition of brass and strings, they have nevertheless maintained the DIY ethos that made them darlings of the underground indie-pop scene, with each song on the album recorded and produced by the band in various gloomy bedrooms around Glasgow.
credits
released January 10, 2020
The Just Joans are David Pope, Katie Pope, Chris Elkin, Fraser Ford, Arion Xenos and Jason Sweeney.
All songs written, recorded and produced by The Just Joans.
The strings on Dear Diary, I Died Again Today, When Nietzsche Calls and The One I Loathe The Least were arranged by Alison Eales.
Dear Diary, I Died Again Today features Rosamund Noll (violin) Aoife Magee (viola), Sonia Cromarty (cello) and Kirsty Matheson (double bass).
When Nietzsche Calls features Tessa Ewart (violin), Aoife Magee (viola) and Eilidh Reid (cello).
The One I Loathe The Least Tessa Ewart (violin), Aoife Magee (viola), Eilidh Reid (cello) and Adam Peter Mills (trumpet).
Mastered by Scott Craggs at Old Colony.
Artwork painted by Katie Pope, and designed by Ben Neasmith.
supported by 54 fans who also own “The Private Memoirs and Confessions of The Just Joans”
Another great album - dean wareham, joanna gruesome, lonely tourist, dorotea, the chills, manhattan love suicides & spearmint are all highlights but the whole lot is pretty darn great really martin kiosk
The latest from Papercuts is another batch of bright, melodic, ’60s-influenced pop songs with driving, heart-on-sleeve vocals. Bandcamp New & Notable Aug 16, 2018
Melodic alt-pop in the vein of Soccer Mommy is driven by winding guitar lines and augmented with dreamy shoegaze elements. Bandcamp New & Notable Jan 14, 2021