Album Reviews
Joy
Electric is a couple of guys who dress like it's the '60s
and play synth pop music like it's the '80s. While
listening to Robot Rock I couldn't help thinking
that I was hearing Men Without Hats' "Pop Goes the
World" over and over again. Being a fan of this
particular brand of bubblegum synth rock, I'll admit that
I'm very taken with Robot Rock. Besides digging
their wonderfully kitschy music, I admire Joy Electric's
dedication to the lost art of analog synthesizer
programming - and these guys are hardcore. Their liner
notes make a big deal of the point that there are NO drum
machines, NO samples and NO computers to be found on this
CD, just Moog Prodigys and the like. Songs like
"Sugar Rush", "I'm Your Boy" and
"Joy Electric Land" will make you want to trip
down a daisy scented path in spring, but songs like
"Monosynth", "The Robot Beat (We're
Back)" and "(We Are) Taking Over" are more
"munching-on-sour-kraut-while-listening-to-Kraftwerk"-type
tracks.
~
Noah Wane
"We're
back" sings Ronnie Martin and, yes, it's difficult
to dispute that he is, bringing with him yet another disc
of his highly idiosyncratic brand of synthpop. The image
has changed - he's ditched the Count Ronald look of We
Are The Music Makers and gone back to
something that harks back to the days of his debut, Melody,
albeit with some really serious sideburns. Yep, you have
to hand it to Ronnie, his appearance is every bit as
distinctive as his music.
The
album's ten tracks all tread fairly familiar Joy
Electric territory lyrically, mixing songs about
analog synths, romantic lurve, and Christianity in
roughly equal measure. Musically, it's a continuation of
the determinedly purist sound that Ronnie has purveyed
since We
Are The Music Makers. The band is Ronnie and
Jeff Cloud (who has been in the Joy Electric background
since the beginning, but only gets band member status on
this release), and the instruments are synthesizers.
That's all - Ronnie goes one step further than those who
eschew the use of non-electronic instruments, and makes a
point of not using samplers, drum machines, and
computers. One man and his Moog. Well, OK, two men and
their Moogs. At this rate, I expect the next Joy
Electric album to be produced using a single
oscillator.
However,
from the sound of the first track, "Sugar
Rush", I have to assume Ronnie's twisted the
truth a little, and he should really have listed
"tape machine" as an instrument too. Why? I
find it very difficult to believe that anybody could have
played some of the synth lines in this track in real
time, since the thing barrels along at something between
180 and 200 BPM and manages to squeeze some surprisingly
intricate synth work into its two and a half minutes. As
with all up-tempo Joy
Electric material, it's relentlessly happy and
energetic, and suits its title - you'd need to take a
couple of pounds of the stuff to get the sort of rush
suggested by the track's tempo though. The next track, "Monosynth",
is a lot slower, and has a rather moody atmosphere
compared to most Joy Electric. As the title suggests,
it's Ronnie singing the praises of his monosynth. There's
really not much need to describe the music itself - it's
Joy Electric, hence it's all synthetic, and filled with
all those "wasp trapped in a tin can" synths
and arcade-like bleeps we've come to know and love.
"I'm
Your Boy"
is the first of Ronnie's religious tracks. From my own
atheist perspective, these don't bother me in the
slightest - you certainly can't accuse him of being
preachy. Far from it, the more obviously Christian tracks
on the album are straightforward expressions of Ronnie's
own faith. I've never had any problem with people singing
about their own beliefs, morals, sexuality, or whatever -
it's when they start trying to push it on me that I get
upset, and nobody could accuse Joy
Electric's music of doing that. OK, soapboxing on
soapboxing in music over, back to the review.
Both
"Joy Electric Land" and "Storybook
Love" fall into the "boy meets
girl" category of Ronnie's output, both are
up-tempo, and so on. Oh, the former does remind me a
little of "The Cobbler" from the "Old
Wives Tales" EP, but a lot of Joy
Electric material reminds me of other Joy Electric
material, so that's OK.
Next
up is "The Robot Beat (We're Back)",
which gets filed under "songs about synths".
However, Ronnie seems a little more annoyed than usual
this time around, and takes the opportunity to get a few
words in against those who dismiss synthpop. I'm
presuming this is a reaction not only to the negative
reception to much of Ronnie's purist synthpop sound, but
also to the anti-electronica backlash that's built up
recently. Oh, and there might be a teensy little
religious reference in there, although it's not entirely
clear whether Ronnie's equating "persecution"
of synthpop with persecution of Christians, or being
specific about Joy
Electric who are criticised for their sound and their
religion, or something else entirely.
After
this, another three tracks of typical up-tempo Joy
Electric synthpop, then finally the ever-so-slightly
sinister "(We Are) Taking Over".
It's in similar vein to "The Robot Beat".
Again, it's difficult to tell whether it's religion or
synthpop or a bit of both that he's singing about, but
who really cares - read it whichever way you want to.
So,
all in all, another excellent Joy
Electric album, albeit a rather short one. Ronnie
shows no signs of changing his music to suit anybody
else, or to increase his popularity, and it's rather
reassuring to find an artist who is producing such
uncompromising material and has no intention of stopping.
The negative side of this, of course, is that if you
didn't like Joy Electric's work in the past, you're
almost certainly not going to like this one either.
However, if you've been exposed to Ronnie's music in the
past, and liked it, this is more of the same. It does
suffer from the same problem as all of the Joy Electric
releases that I've heard to date - eventually all of the
songs blur together, and there does seem to be a definite
limit on the number of sounds that Ronnie can produce
with his equipment. Still, it's highly enjoyable in small
doses, and the album's exactly the right length for me to
listen to it all the way through while I'm driving home
at night. Favourite tracks? "Sugar Rush"
and "Monosynth", definitely.
~
Al Crawford
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