Monday, June 7, 2010

record review: Tokyo Police Club - Champ


Sophomore slump often befalls bands when they dare to tread into new territory and look further than their beloved debut tunes. Sometimes, though, the band in question embrace such a wholesome new persona that the entire concept of a weak second album is lost amongst the brilliance. Earlier this year, Vampire Weekend did just that with Contra; now, Canadian indie rockers Tokyo Police Club have followed suit. The guitars in opener “Favourite Food” are delayed yet racy and pave the path for “Favourite Colour”, the sweetest ode to teenage love I’ve heard since Weezer’s “(If You're Wondering) I Want You To”. Tokyo Police Club dig deep into Bleed American era Jimmy Eat World, turning up the amps and the nostalgia to the maximum level. The layers of humming and percussion are infectious and delivered in perfect proportions to the edgy nasally vocals from Dave Monks. “Wait Up (Boots of Danger)” marks the end of the first, uptempo-crazed chapter of Champ, and is followed by “Bambi”, a beat driven electronica track which eases you into the latter half of the record—toned down, mature, thought out. Who ever could have imagined that this band would be dolling out croons about regretfully pensive mornings that follow late nights filled with bad decisions? Champ is hi-fi, it’s cheerful yet thought provoking, and it’s overflowing with emotion. It’s everything that’s uncool in a nutshell, but if you love your ears, you will put aside your hipster irony and indulge in this superbly crafted album.
4.5/5

Tokyo Police Club - Favourite Colour [mp3, HIGHLY RECOMMENDED!]

Champ drops tomorrow (08 June), make sure you pick it up!

2 comments:

popsiculture said...

Hey, nice review. I'm not sure Champ is as uncool as you make out though. I liked Favourite Colour and Bambi too, but what about Not Sick? Best track on the album.

Hanan said...

thanks
but you didn't get what I meant. after praising the album with words like "brilliant" and "perfect proportions" (not to mention the high rating of 4.5), I ended it saying that it was uncool and what I meant was that it doesn't fit hipster standards of cool but who gives a damn cause it's a fantastic LP