No Joy

No Joy are a Canadian shoegaze band, formed in late 2009 by Jasamine White-Gluz and Laura Lloyd.

No Joy
Background information
OriginMontreal, Canada
GenresShoegaze, indie rock, dream pop, noise pop
Years active2009–present
LabelsMexican Summer, Sexbeat, Topshelf Records, Grey Market
Websitehttp://nojoymusic.com/
MembersJasamine White-Gluz
Garland Hastings
Michael Farsky

Biography

No Joy's first show was with Grant Hart of Husker Du on December 15 2009. The band continued to play locally, including a show with then-up-and-coming indie band Best Coast. The latter's lead singer, Bethany Cosentino, took a liking to the band and tweeted, "Dude, No Joy is the best band ever. Two hot blonde girls just shredding away. Sooooo amazing".[1]

The band soon signed to Mexican Summer and released their first 7" single, "No Summer" b/w "No Joy". Its release enabled No Joy to book their own national U.S. tour, bringing along La Sera (a Vivian Girls side project) for a three-week stint of mostly West Coast shows. Around this time, London-based label Sexbeat reissued the debut 7" for a UK/European release. No Joy toured later that fall with Mexican Summer labelmates Dungen.

The 7" sold out quickly, and six months later, on November 16, 2010, No Joy released their debut LP, Ghost Blonde, to wide critical acclaim. Said Pitchfork: "The guitars, loud enough to obliterate everything within 50 yards, create a balmy atmosphere where lacerating riffs and blurry strumming shares face time with ear-piercing feedback".[2]

The band's strong DIY mentality in terms of producing and recording their music was highlighted in an interview with The Stool Pigeon: "You can record anything for free now. If you’ve got a laptop or a friend’s laptop, do it yourself,".[3] However they left the mixing side of the project up to the Raveonettes' Sune Rose Wagner. On working with Wagner, White-Gluz said, "We were recording in our space and it was sounding like shit, so we had the idea of someone helping to clean it up a little bit, but everybody in Montreal was asking for way too much money. And we’ve both always liked the way Raveonettes’ records sound. We exchanged emails a few times and we had exactly the same music tastes, so it just went from there".[3] The final package "convincingly captures the gloriously fuzzy, effects-covered sound of the shoegaze era, but escapes being mere copycats by adding a wonderfully spooky atmosphere and by writing hooky, easy to swallow melodies", said a 4.5 star review from AllMusic.[4]

The praise for Ghost Blonde, and No Joy's notoriously loud and hypnotizing live act, garnered attention from notable publications such as The New York Times, BrooklynVegan and The Guardian[5] amongst others.

In early 2011, No Joy released 7" single "Hawaii" in the UK; the B-side was a remix of the song "Indigo Child" done by Stereolab's Tim Gane.

No Joy toured the UK in early 2011, their first stint overseas, with Florida band Surfer Blood, and returned a month later for a European tour including a show in London with Wire and an appearance at Barcelona's Primavera Sound festival. Immediately upon returning, the band flew to SXSW where they played nine shows showcasing for media including Pitchfork, The A.V. Club and Gorilla vs. Bear.

The band toured North America during the remainder of 2011, supporting Vivian Girls and then co-headlining with Marnie Stern, with whom they released a split single (No Joy contributed Shangri-Las cover "He Cried").

In June 2012, with No Joy's second album they began working with producer Jorge Elbrecht (Sky Ferreira, Ariel Pink, Japanese Breakfast) who would go on to become an integral part of the band's sound. Wait to Pleasure was critically acclaimed, receiving an 8.0 from Pitchfork.[6]

In March 2015, No Joy announced the June 9 release of their third album, More Faithful.[7]

On June 15, 2016, No Joy released Drool Sucker on Topshelf Records, the first in a planned series of EPs.[8] It was followed by Creep, released on February 24, 2017 on new label Grey Market.[9]

Exploring an interest in electronic music, No Joy collaborated with former Spacemen 3 member Peter Kember (aka Sonic Boom);[10] the resulting EP, titled No Joy/Sonic Boom, was released March 30, 2018 by Joyful Noise Recordings.[11]

No Joy's fourth album, Motherhood, will be released on August 21, 2020 via Joyful Noise Recordings. From the press release, No Joy is now presented as a solo project of White-Gluz, and contains no mention of co-founder Lloyd, suggesting she is no longer involved. [12]

Discography

Studio albums

EPs

  • Negaverse (2012, Mexican Summer)
  • Pastel and Pass Out (2013, Mexican Summer)
  • Drool Sucker (2016, Topshelf Records)
  • Creep (2017, Grey Market)
  • No Joy/Sonic Boom with Peter Kember (2018, Joyful Noise Recordings)

Singles

  • "No Summer" 7 (2010, Mexican Summer/Sexbeat)
  • "Hawaii"" 7 (2010, Mexican Summer)
  • "He Cried" split 7" with Marnie Stern (2011, Associated Electronic Recordings)
  • "Hare Tarot Lies" digital single (2013, Mexican Summer)
  • "Hollywood Teeth" digital single (2015, Mexican Summer)
  • "Everything New" digital single (2015, Mexican Summer)
  • "Califone" digital single (2017, Grey Market)
  • "Birthmark" digital single (2020, Joyful Noise)
gollark: Thus, python-able image file.
gollark: A fun feature of python is that it actually will run `__main__.py` or something from ZIP files, and ZIP files are weird and backward and can be concatenated onto the end of another file without decoders caring much.
gollark: PNG has some mandatory header parts at the start and I don't think you could make something both a valid PNG and valid in any modern executable format.
gollark: PNG files aren't "run", they're opened and displayed by some sort of image viewer program. And no PNG has no metadata, or it's not actually a valid file. While you can mix hidden data in with the image data, computers will not randomly run that, barring some sort of extremely bad vulnerability.
gollark: It's probably going to be treated as multiple sub-objects for collision detection though.

References

  1. Carpenter, Lorraine. "White noise". Montreal Mirror. Archived from the original on 2012-05-08. Retrieved May 22, 2013.
  2. Dougas, Martin. "No Joy: Ghost Blonde". Pitchfork. Retrieved 6 November 2011.
  3. Bassett, Jordan. "Interview: No Joy". The Stool Pigeon. Retrieved 6 November 2011.
  4. "Ghost Blonde - No Joy". AllMusic. Retrieved 6 November 2011.
  5. Lester, Paul (26 April 2011). "No Joy (No 1,011)". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 6 November 2011.
  6. "No Joy: Wait to Pleasure". Pitchfork. Retrieved 2020-05-26.
  7. Pearson, Jeff. "No Joy Announce New Album More Faithful". Pastemagazine.com. Retrieved 2015-07-13.
  8. "No Joy Say 'Fuck You' to Music Industry with New EP Series". Exclaim.ca.
  9. "No Joy announce new EP 'Creep," share "Califone" video, touring". BrooklynVegan.com.
  10. "No Joy / Sonic Boom: No Joy / Sonic Boom EP Album Review - Pitchfork". Pitchfork.com. Retrieved 17 May 2018.
  11. "No Joy's Jasamine White-Gluz and Sonic Boom announce collaborative EP, share video for lead single "Obsession": Watch". Consequenceofsound.net. 7 February 2018. Retrieved 17 May 2018.
  12. Bloom, Madison. "No Joy Announces New Album, Shares Video for New Song". Pitchfork. Retrieved 8 May 2020.
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