Junk (M83 album)


Junk is the seventh studio album by French electronic music band M83, released on 8 April 2016 on Naïve Records in France and Mute Records in the United States. It is the first album released by the band in a half-decade since 2011's Hurry Up, We're Dreaming and the first release since Digital Shades Vol. 1 without longtime vocalist and keyboardist Morgan Kibby. The albums also features guest appearances from Mai Lan, Steve Vai, Susanne Sundfør, Beck and Jordan Lawlor.

Background

Junk marks the band's first studio release without longtime vocalist and keyboardist Morgan Kibby, who left the band prior to recording sessions of the album. On 4 March 2016, Gonzalez announced that Dallas musician Kaela Sinclair would be replacing Kibby for the upcoming tour supporting Junk, whom he found by crowd-sourcing online. The track "Walkway Blues" marks the debut songwriting and lead vocal contribution of Jordan Lawlor, better known by his stage name J. Laser, who was also recruited through a crowd-sourced audition in 2011.
Gonzalez noted that he was inspired by 1970s and 1980s television shows such as Punky Brewster and Who's the Boss?, stating, "I feel like TV shows are starting to sound and look the same. There's no more passion anymore. So this album is a tribute to those old-fashioned shows."
Guitarist Steve Vai makes an uncredited appearance on the track "Go!".

Release

The album's first single, "Do It, Try It", was released on 1 March 2016. The second single from the album, "Solitude", was released on 17 March 2016 in Australia and New Zealand and on 18 March 2016 worldwide. The third single from the album, "Go!", featuring Mai Lan, was released on 5 April 2016.

Critical reception

Junk received generally favourable reviews from contemporary music critics. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalised rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, the album received an average score of 66, based on 29 reviews, which indicates "generally favorable reviews".
AllMusic editor Heather Phares praised the album's various 80s-influenced production choices, saying that the "cultural dumpster-diving works so well because it's done with lots of love and zero irony." Phares added that Junks musical journey to the past is similar to Daft Punk's Random Access Memories, only Gonzalez is content to make the type of music he loves on his own terms, concluding that, "While all listeners may not share his fascination with '80s pop culture detritus, it's hard not to respect how expertly he transforms it into something genuine." In The New York Times, Ben Ratliff wrote that Junk "expands somewhat on the strengths of Hurry Up, balancing Italo-disco chill-out atmospheres and calibrated buildups and releases." Paul MacInnes from The Guardian said about Gonzalez's penchant for 80s nostalgia throughout the record, "It’s fantasy stuff – evocative rather than perceptive, and awfully cheesy. But it’s also incredibly refined. The love and care that has gone into this ersatz rendering of a remembered past is quite overpowering. It’s like someone carving a bust of Jennifer Warnes in marble." 'Suzy Exposito of Rolling Stone gave praise to the featured artists throughout the track list, singling out Mai Lan's performance on "Laser Gun" and "Atlantique Sud" for putting a "timeless, ghostly vocal sheen" on a record that "leans too heavily on the quirks from the past, rife with the least flattering odds and ends of a time long gone."

Accolades

Track listing

Charts