Toronto Star

Rockers return with new tricks, new fans

Taking a years-long hiatus was gamble for Japandroid­s, but their revamp has paid off

- BEN RAYNER POP MUSIC CRITIC

Yeah, yeah, we’re all sick of this narrative: beloved indie band burns itself out on the precipice of mainstream success, withdraws into the pop-music ether for an extended period of soul searching and finally resurfaces after throwing out the rulebook and allowing itself the luxuries of a plush studio recording with its Best Album Yet.

Sometimes the story’s not just a story, though. Sometimes it’s fact. And so the story goes with Vancouver duo Japandroid­s and its highly accomplish­ed third LP, Near to the Wild Heart of Life.

Vocalist/guitarist Brian King and drummer David Prowse had logged more than 200 shows in support of 2012’s celebrated Celebratio­n Rock — “I lost count,” admits King — by the time they finally staggered off the road in late 2013 and took a muchneeded break from the band for pretty much the first time in its sevenyear existence.

The six-month pause was necessary to recharge Japandroid­s’ thoroughly depleted batteries, but also to renew King’s and Prowse’s shared creative spirit. They had, they agreed, taken the whole jubilant, maxi-minimalist, fist-pumping Japandroid­s thing “as far as we thought we could take it” on Celebratio­n Rock and subsequent­ly burned themselves out on it a little bit.

For a band so synonymous with “the feels,” it would have been dishonest for Japandroid­s to carry on down the same old path if they weren’t really feeling it. So, yes, after that extended period of soul searching, they threw out the rulebook and allowed themselves the luxuries of a plush studio recording — including a titanic mixdown from frequent National collaborat­or Peter Katis — while making Near to the Wild Heart of Life.

“There was definitely pressure on us to follow up with Celebratio­n Rock, Part 2 — you know, now that we’d kinda nailed the formula, just keep repeating it indefinite­ly,” said King from the Japandroid­s 2017 tour opener in Madison, Wis., this past Monday. “That didn’t particular­ly interest Dave or I.

“The thing that really kind of got us excited and inspired to start writing again together and to make this record was the idea of just kind of breaking away from that minimalism, breaking away from the rules that we’d placed on ourselves, just kind of doing whatever we felt like doing . . . So this record is very much an attempt — our first attempt, I guess — to stray outside the boundaries that we’d previously placed on ourselves.

“It never occurred to us before this record that we could make a record with higher production values or other instrument­ation, or where not all the songs are raging fast or things like that. So it was really kind of the first step into a sort of new world, in a way.”

Fret not, the new album still has the anthemic, life-affirming thrust and spine-tingling punk-rock noise of “classic” Japandroid­s. But, as it turns out, messing around with newfangled ideas like tempo changes and keyboards and lovingly layered production has actually made Japandroid­s an even better band.

There was some worry on King’s and Prowse’s parts that disappeari­ng from view for a couple of years right after they’d achieved their greatest success to date — Celebratio­n Rock was shortliste­d for the Polaris Music Prize and muscled its way up to No. 37 on the Billboard Hot 200 — and making an ambitious new record essentiall­y in secret might completely derail the momentum they’d built.

They were, thus, delighted to watch all the small-venue warm-up dates they’d booked last fall sell out instantly. And now, as Japandroid­s commence their first proper tour in three years, they’re looking at another run of sold-out dates on both sides of the border, including a two-night stand at the Danforth Music Hall on Friday and Saturday.

 ?? CAMILO CHRISTEN/CANVAS MEDIA PR ?? Japandroid­s, a rock duo originally from Vancouver, have a hit new album, Near To The Wild Heart Of Life.
CAMILO CHRISTEN/CANVAS MEDIA PR Japandroid­s, a rock duo originally from Vancouver, have a hit new album, Near To The Wild Heart Of Life.

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