| Am 24.03.17 wird „Without Warning“ das zweite Album des französischen Electro-Pop Acts Juveniles veröffentlicht. Das neue Album vereint zwei Synth-Pop-Generationen: Jean Sylvain, das Gehirn und die Stimme hinter Juveniles und Joakim Bouaziz, Produzent und Performer, der seit 1999 exzentrische elektronische Musik veröffentlicht. Mit der analogen Ausrüstung und der Verwendung von Joakim  Bouaziz's einzigartigen Aufnahmemethoden entstand ein emotionales, songorientieres  Electro-Pop Album das wehmütig und mühelos die Geschichte von Disco, Techno und Acid House erzählt.
   Juveniles - Someone Better Die erste Single 'Someone Better' ist ein catchy, Disco-Funk-Popsong in dem die wundervolle Stimme von Jean-Sylvain Le Gouicden perfekt mit dem treibenden Bass und den Synthi/Keyboards-Sounds harmoniert. Get your disco-funk !     French duo from Rennes (Brittany) cultivate pop idealism with  Yuksek-produced debut album designed to soothe lost souls and be the soundtrack  of sleepless nights.   « To get back to one’s youth, one has merely to repeat one’s follies », Oscar Wilde wrote in The Portrait of Dorian Gray. Juveniles have neither lost the  former, nor given up the latter. And if it is often said that boys will be  boys, the two Frenchmen do not see it this way. From their beginnings on Parisian  label Kistuné up to the release of their debut album this year, Jean-Sylvain Le  Gouic and Thibaut Doray have used their youth and their big-time choruses as  shields against boredom and as a way to avoid a much-feared coming of age.   We Are Young, they casually claimed on their debut single in 2011. The three words,  just like the name of the band itself, were not insignificant. They operated  like a mantra, the bold declaration of war of a duo ready to take arms and  stand up for the remnants of their innocence. However, why draw big guns and  sharp knives when one can use much more subtle and cutting-edge arguments? Such  is the essence of their would-be eternal utopian and sensual pop that  constantly plays with fire. From exuberant Rennes, the two boys’ HQ, We Are  Young would travel through France and eventually leave the country to make  young people who do not care about borders or nationality and refuse to go to  sleep for fear they will never wake up dance to their rhythms. Juveniles have  chosen fatal electro-pop as their main foreign language, specializing in  eighties style. Needless to say they got a first in it.   Even though the duo are definitely looking towards Manchester, The  Smiths and New Order, they started their live career in France. The performance  which started it all took place at the Transmusicales festival in Rennes in  December 2011. A few months later, they headlined the Inrockuptibles Festival  2012, drawing yet more attention to themselves. There, Juveniles gave an  astonishingly raw and effective performance, teaming up with British band Hot  Chip with whom they share a talent for making people shake their hips and  calves. This is indeed the duo’s strength: they have a perfect command of live  performance, which allows them to do indulge in any eccentricity they fancy.  They are incredibly intense and their entire energy is aimed at getting their  audience’s attention and not to let it go before sheer exhaustion, when brains  are melting and legs are dead. The will-o’-the-wisp duo then turns into fiery  pop masters and have only one thing in mind: they want to set on fire young  people with pure dreams and careless impudence.   Who better than Yuksek could the two guys from Brittany hire to help  them conquer dancefloors and broken hearts? With his second album Living on the Edge of Time, the artist  who had so far been known as an electro champion showed that he also knew the  language of pop like the back of his hand. This was a chance the duo — who were  perfectly bilingual themselves — had to take, and so they took off to Yuksek’s  native city of Reims (in the north of France) to record part of their first  album with him. « We had had the  opportunity to meet Yuksek before that and we just clicked. I think we have  fairly similar personalities and this helped us a lot when we had to spend all  these months together in the studio. We learnt a lot from him, including how to  create more with less and how not to be repetitive », explains  Jean-Sylvain, whose crooning voice can be equally elegant and ethereal on Juveniles.   To do more but not too much is what the duo have managed with this  album. Juveniles is a combination of  the band’s early pop idealism with their penchant for eighties keyboards and  fatal beats that their cunning producer would not disown. More than a mere  collection of pop bombs used to blow up clubs (Void), the twelve tracks of Juveniles cover all the states of mind  of youth, instantly going from the most absolute bliss (We Are Young) to  the deepest spleen (Washed Away). But instead of drowning themselves in  melancholy, the two boys prefer to tame it and turn it into something to dance  to (All I Ever Wanted). They also use sensuality as a weapon against  sadness (Elisa, Adriatique), allowing themselves all kinds of eccentricities  in the process (eg. the very disco Fantasy). The shadow of the Smiths is  definitely looming over Weekend At Mine, while that of Blood Orange  hovers over Summer Night, and that of Phoenix over Strangers.  This proves that Juveniles may have been born on the wrong side of the Channel,  but that they nonetheless are members of a family of French musicians who speak  pop fluently and without the slightest accent. |