Jupe Jupe
Seattle, Washington, United States | Established. Jan 01, 2010 | INDIE
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'Jupe Jupe', a band from the USA, presents us with 'As The Body Will', a song that is part of their current album 'Midnight Waits For No One'. In this piece, different musical influences merge into an interesting mixture of indie pop, post punk and dark pop. Although I personally don't particularly like the indie pop / post punk touch, I have to say that this song definitely has its qualities.
The mood of 'As The Body Will' is characterised by a certain Moody atmosphere that runs through the entire song. At the same time, 'Jupe Jupe' manages to deliver a flawless production. Every detail seems to be in its place and provides a harmonious soundscape. Especially the use of synthesizers stands out positively and gives the song a distinctive touch.
The track impresses with its catchiness and hooklines that quickly get into your ears. You can hardly resist bobbing your head along or feeling the beat.
'As The Body Will' is particularly suitable for lovers of synthpop with guitars. The combination of melodic synthesizer sounds and guitars creates an exciting dynamic that makes the song seem alive. In doing so, Jupe Jupe succeeds in capturing a certain nostalgia of the New Wave era while at the same time creating a modern sound. - Electrozombies
Background/Info: American formation Jupe Jupe has been active since 2010 and this year unleashed their sixth full-length album to date. This is the first work which has been released by a label.
Content: Jupe Jupe holds on their familiar sound ingredients and influences; the songs remain driven by a blend of Indie-Pop and Pop-Rock with extra 80s Wave elements on top. They now and then remind me of The Style Council but globally speaking this album reveals a very personal approach in sound. The saxophone play injects a warm touch to the production.
+ + + : Compared to their previous works this album reveals a serious improvement in song writing and production. The opus is progressively growing revealing its best part at “Open Door”, “Perfect Day To Die” and “Horroshow”. The main strength of these songs is the catchy, elevating chorus.
Conclusion: Definitely the best album I’ve heard from Jupe Jupe and which will catch the attention of a wider audience. - Side-Line
Seattle based quartet Jupe Jupe embarked on a tightrope walk on their debut album Midnight Waits for No One, choosing the middle between 80s synth pop and dark wave, with a topping of Roxy Music-alike saxophone. Tracks like Open Door, Secondhand Star and A Picture of Us will surely find their way to nostalgia playlists, but don't sleep on the deeper cuts. The slow One Night Outside and the fast-paced Horrorshow are both playing the long game, and will make an impression that will last longer.
With four members with plenty of mileage in the entertainment business, it is no wonder that the sound is carefully balanced and the dynamics are old school: the music has ample opportunity to breathe. As long as they keep travelling on other roads besides the highways, Jupe Jupe is definitely a band to watch. - Here Come the Flood
Seattleite indie rock group Jupe Jupe create an intoxicatingly urban-tinged atmosphere on their recent single "As The Body Will". Taken from the album Midnight Waits for No One, this single sees the group use a palette of punchy drums, otherworldy synths, and stern vocals to communicate themes of mortality and the everlasting quality of dreams that take place in fallible human bodies. Jupe Jupe is comprised of vocalist and synth player My Young, guitarist, bassist and saxophonist Bryan Manzo, guitarist Patrick Partington, and drummer Jarrod Arbini on drums and percussion. The quartet are a tight ensemble, having been playing together since 2010, and can confidently and effectively deliver their melodically rich music that is as modern as it is nostalgic. - No Transmission
Jupe Jupe, one of Popdose’s Best New Artists of 2017, has gone back to the future yet again — though we promise this sequel is WAY better than the western one starring Michael J. Fox. I’ll admit, we were a bit late to Jupe Jupe party; the Seattle-based new wave band was already on their 4th album by the time we discovered their lovelorn, synth drenched, earworm pop confections. And now they’re back with a new EP, Nightfall (out February 28th), and we have the world premiere of their new video, the MTV 120 Minutes-ready, How Can We Both Be In Love’.
Crush-worthy video babe? Check. Cutting edge (at the time) digital visual effects? Check. Blistering sax solo? Check. Stop motion filmmaking? Check. Star Wipe? Well, you can’t have everything…
Erik Foster of another great Seattle band, The Dirty Sidewalks, directed the video, creating a gorgeous, colorful, and sexy as sin cinemascape that I bet would look good on the dancefloor (projected on the nearest wall). The clip pays equal homage to Andy Warhol and Russell Mulcahy (director of Duran Duran’s ‘Rio’, Elton John’s ‘I’m Still Standing’).
It’s hard to believe that the ”Seattle Sound” immortalized by Nirvana, Soundgarden and Mother Love Bone is already 30 years old. But Jupe Jupe (pronounced ”joop joop” after the laser sound effect) takes the Delorean a bit further back, to the time when Depeche Mode, Camouflage, Erasure, and Book of Love were filling dance floors in new wave clubs where everyone came come reeking of clove-cigarettes and Aqua Net. On the new EP, Bryan Manzo pulls triple duty, laying down guitar, bass and saxophone (more ‘Careless Whisper’ and ‘Rio’, less Kenny G). My Young (vocals and synths); Patrick Partington (guitar), and Jarrod Arbini (drums and percussion) round out the quartet. - Popdose
Jupe Jupe clearly like to get their '80s on, but that's not a pejorative observation. This is a band full of left turns -- for instance, on first listen Jupe Jupe might sound British, but they're actually American, and while you might expect an American band of this sort to operate out of L.A. or New York, they in fact hail from Seattle. Obviously, the Pacific Northwest isn't exactly famous for turning out bands of new wave revivalists, but Jupe Jupe seem to follow their own path resolutely right down the line. On their second album, Reduction in Drag, Jupe Jupe come off like the wildly successful result of some musical geneticist's ambitious attempts to fuse vintage Depeche Mode and Duran Duran. Sleek and sonically supple, Reduction in Drag is a happy marriage of synth pop and Roxy Music-influenced new romantic stylings. And while those without a taste for '80s-derived sounds might not be able to find their way into these waters, anyone with even a passive appreciation for expertly applied, fluid synth riffs, drama-filled vocals, infectious pop choruses, and deft dance-rock grooves will be able to ease right into Reduction in Drag. And despite Jupe Jupe's preference for the musical flavors of another era, they nevertheless make those sounds seem entirely applicable to the present day. - allmusic.com
Jupe Jupe – Nightfall EP (self-released)
This Seattle band’s latest release is a solid 5-song EP of dark, hook-filled post-punk with atmospheric synths, moody guitars, mournful sax, driving rhythms and melancholy melodies. — DY - KEXP
A million years ago cloaked in the ambition of former lives we accidentally caught a Jupe Jupe live performance down in Austin during South-By-Southest. The memory, hazy by design and fuzzy by alcohol, stands out in a sea of bands that week of that particular year (2012?), simply because our assumption of their home base was off by, oh, roughly 4,600 miles.
We thought Manchester, they confirmed Seattle.
It’s easy to get that mixed up. The new wave quartet are kindred spirits of that beloved Manchester sound, and settle into another classic alternative groove on their latest single “Faith In What You Hear.” The track, which you can hear below, is off Jupe Jupe’s latest album, Lonely Creatures, which serves as another impeccable mix of gloomy sounds and indie dance floor empowerment.
Jupe Jupe are at their best when they are showing an impassioned restraint, and that’s evident here as “Faith in What You Hear” glides along a path of seductive synths and slashing guitarwork. The warmth is familiar, but the sound is entirely their own.
“’Faith in What You Hear’ is about the possible unseen danger of blind trust,” the band tells Pure Grain Audio. “Sometimes the words we think we want to hear can turn out to be as hurtful as what we tried to avoid. Musically we wanted to lay this melancholy on a pulsing dance feel, going for an electropop/post-punk sound. We’ve always enjoyed music and vocals that are a bit mismatched in that way.”
Listen to “Faith in What You Hear” below, and hold out hope that eventually Jupe Jupe will meet us halfway between Seattle and Manchester for that long-awaited Boston gig. - Vanyaland
Jupe Jupe, a quartet group from the grand city of Seattle, joined forces with producer Matt Bayles to craft Lonely Creatures. Bayles is known for his previous work with Minus the Bear and worked with Jupe Jupe to musically engineer tunes to fit the mood of the album. The album itself is littered with electro-beats that propel the theme forward song after song. This theme of a science fiction alternative future is both boldly stated and quietly underlined throughout the verses and bridges. In songs like “The Soft Machine” we hear the slow and soothing lyrics of a hope still to come, “our well intended plans misshaped by human hands are made for all and made to fall but maybe…” This theme is strongly reminiscent of Gary Numan’s album concept for Telekon. For those who may have listened to Numan’s rendition, Jupe Jupe may be a welcome rehash of those themes. Putting past influences aside, it is apparent that Lonely Creatures was lovingly crafted by all those involved. Each song has it’s own signature, and the beats wrapping up the songwriting are excellently crafted.
Ultimately, Lonely Creatures serves its message to its audience on a well-prepared platter. The sense of a long forgotten land is well-crafted and leaves the listener willing to roam its lands for at least a few rotations. - KJHK
Jupe Jupe
Crooked Kisses
[Jupe Jupe Music 2014]
Despite its melancholy – even creepy – subject matter, Crooked Kisses, the third album from the Seattle quartet, Jupe Jupe, is filled with life-affirming choruses and hummable reverb-drenched guitar riffs. The rhythm chugs along, building against a backdrop of synths and big drums, and vocalist My Young‘s gentle croon. If the record was just a collection of retro synth-pop like the opener, “Pieces of You,” it would be well worth the listen, but there are clever twists throughout. The shimmery guitar line in “Whispers Kill” plays on the “everyone’s a spy” line to slyly incorporate some 1960s spy movie soundtrack and surf sounds. And although things never get too heavy, tracks like “Autumn October” and “Darkness” add a sharper, rock edge that keeps the band from sounding too much like its 80s New Wave influences.
While the entire album is solid, “Love to Watch You Fall” and “All the Things We Made” have the group firing on all cylinders: the dark lyrics, stellar melodies, and layered instrumentation against a solid classic dance beat. - The Owl Mag
Note: This review originally appeared in the Illinois Entertainer.
Countless bands these days look back to the 1980s for inspiration, but Jupe Jupe distinguishes itself by focusing on the darker and more brooding side of New Wave. Think of Ultravox or Talk Talk, and you’ll have a pretty good idea of what this Seattle-based quartet is up to on its third full-length release, Crooked Kisses. Most of these tracks stretch beyond the five-minute mark, which gives listeners plenty of time to delve into the atmospheric arrangements and ominous lyrics about everything from small-minded townspeople to cosmic disaster.
On “Autumn October” and “Love To Watch You Fall,” lead singer My Young’s vocals resonate above a lush mix of his keyboards playing and the energetic guitars of Bryan Manzo and Patrick Partington. Drummer Jarrod Arbini anchors the bottom-heavy rhythms of “Darkness,” and Jupe Jupe opts for a straight up rock approach (albeit with synthesizers) on the social satire of “Vicariously.” “Whispers Kill” comes a bit too close to being overly precious, but Jupe Jupe expertly combines bitterness with an irresistible melody on Crooked Kisses’ first single, “Pieces Of You.” - Broken Hearted Toy/The Illinois Entertainer
Jupe Jupe is like Billy Idol, if Billy Idol decided to venture into the dance-synth world. The quartet has been performing together since 2010, and its latest release, Reduction In Drag, is out November 1. Album track “Suspicion” is a slinky number that could fit easily into any nightclub around the country. The band’s sound is as much a throwback to older glam and analog times as it is a modern update for new listeners. Equal parts dark and danceable, Jupe Jupe is a band to watch. Download “Suspicion” and fellow Reduction In Drag track “Once Around The Sun” below. - Magnet Magazine
British new-wave heartbreak
Your tearful pint of Ben and Jerry’s has nothing on this album. This synthpop Seattle band makes mourning as upbeat as anyone can possibly manage. Most of the album stays pretty dark and lamenting, using synth and depressing Robert Smith-esque vocals to remind you that we all die alone (though notably, the album ends with a happier sounding “New Stars in the Sky.”) The combination of the two provides listeners with grooving waves of sound that bob along to the sound of souls dying. Bass drum and muted snare keep the percussion low-key, but with expertise rhythmic choices to assure no one gets lost in the flowing sea of vocals and synth, providing the highest form of pep to the album. The combination of driving drumset, haunting melodies, and sharp hooks make this album a good mellow soundtrack, but the lyrics hold forefront for the distress the album so accurately portrays. - WVAU.org
Jupe Jupe is made up My Young on vocals and synths, Bryan Manzo and Patrick Partington on guitars, and Jarrod Arbini on drums and percussion. The four members are veterans of the Seattle and Austin indie pop and prog scenes (Pleasurecraft, The Cinematics [U.S.], Maximum Coherence During Flying).
The band’s third release, Crooked Kisses, offers ten tracks about unrequited lust, love and heartache, influenced by British new wave, ’60s European spy films and lonely, ghost-town Americana. Teaming up once again with Martin Feveryear at Jupiter Studios (REM, Robert Fripp, Death Cab for Cutie, Modest Mouse), Jupe Jupe spent nearly two years finessing a collection of hooks, melodies and choruses into a singular vision for Crooked Kisses.
Into melancholy electro-dance-rock? Jupe Jupe might be your new favorite band. - The Big Takeover
It’s still Day 1 (technically) of SXSW Muzak, but so far my favorite discovery has been Seattle’s Jupe Jupe, a dark-lit synthpop quartet that pulls from the usual 80s romo-wave suspects but still manages to have something fresh to offer. Only I go to sxsw and find a German-influenced electronic band that’s as far from hipster as humanly possible. They got shoulders swaying in a bar on the outskirts of Austin Rock City that reminded me of the Double Deuce from Road House. RIP Patrick Swayze 4ever _Mm - The Boston Phoenix—Blog
They’re baaaaaaaaack! Seattle’s Jupe Jupe keeps going, unleashing their third album, Crooked Kisses, upon the world. And, here’s the thing, they keep getting better. The reason for this is that the confused notion of their first two releases—are they prog or are they new wave?—has vanished, and Jupe Jupe is now strictly a group that conjures visions of ‘80s synth-pop along the lines of New Order. Or, put more forwardly, the prog influences have more or less completely disappeared. That they don’t have songs on Crooked Kisses as good as New Order is perhaps a minor failing, but the band seems determined to deliver the goods this time out and has constructed an album that feels like an album, start to finish, rather than a collection of assorted songs. And there’s plenty here to be gradually won over by. If there’s one thing that’s a takeaway with this LP, it’s that Jupe Jupe are really trying this time out, which is not to slight their previous releases, but there’s a real sense of putting everything on the line and urgency here that the group hasn’t really established previously. “We want more than we’ve got,” goes a line on one song, which is just proof of this. Even more, this album of 10 songs runs about 50 minutes, and there isn’t one bad song in the bunch.
On Crooked Kisses, singer My Young’s voice is full of drama and twisted despair, and the rest of the band provides muscle to the music. Whether it’s the jittery “Pieces of You” or (possibly the album’s best track) the atonal keyboards of “Never Ask Why” or the heavenly Pet Shop Boys soundalike “New Stars in the Sky”, there’s a great deal of focused musicianship on display. Crooked Kisses is an album that could easily be slipped into a club mix, but it’s also one for fans for retro bands like The Strokes. The whole package seems complete this time out, and that’s a cause for celebration for those who may have backed off Jupe Jupe for not knowing where they wanted to go with their sound. “We’ll get ours yet” is a line from “New Stars in the Sky” and there’s the impression that this might just be the relative commercial breakthrough that the band so brazenly craves here. If there’s anything that this album proves, it’s that the next time that Jupe Jupe come back around, their career trajectory is now such that they might just deliver a real contender for Album of the Year. - Popmatters
Seattle synth pop outfit Jupe Jupe released its first album, Invaders, little more than a year before this follow-up. Releasing back-to-back albums might not seem a good thing, considering that Invaders was quite a stylistically confused affair. However, the band has come up with the goods this time, as though it had been saving the great stuff for its sophomore album. As I said about Jupe Jupe in my Invaders review last year: “They have strong songs – they just have to deliver an album that has a consistent sound, pick an era and run with it.” Someone in the group is reading its press, because it appears that they zeroed in on that precise statement, and the band has become much more of an individualistic entity.
While Invaders had a clutch of great songs, it didn’t really know what it wanted to be. Reduction in Drag, sees the band throwing its influences into the proverbial blender and mashing the puree button. Clearly, Jupe Jupe has honed its sound, and the end result is an enjoyable blend of the Strokes, Simple Minds and Duran Duran, with a slight hint of ‘70s prog. Reduction in Drag is a more even-keeled affair, with catchy and unique songs. Singer My Young practically seethes with Interpol-esque evil on “Piranha”, “Suspicion” has an almost Roxy Music feel to it, and album highlight, “Stalker”, pings and pongs across an Atari soundscape with devious intent. There’s the odd misstep, such as the music box fragility of five-minute long ballad “The Fire Curtain”, which seems to be a bit out of place on an album chock full of fairly upbeat party anthems, but it isn’t an egregious backfire. “El Topo” is interesting in that it combines futuristic surf pop with foreign female vocal samples (are they Spanish or are they Japanese? – I can’t tell), but the effect is somewhat middling. Generally, things have a tendency to fall apart at the very end of the record. Did we really need a six-minute dance floor instrumental in the form of “The Raincoats of Cherbourg” to close out the disc? Still, doesn’t diminish the fact that this release is a lot stronger and more cohesive.
As with Invaders, the band isn’t really reinventing the wheel here, but it has gone much further in developing something that is more of an overall identity, which forces the band to slightly rise above its collective inspirations. Reduction in Drag is a much more enjoyable listen front to back than the album that preceded it. At the rate that Jupe Jupe is progressing, crafting music into something skin-tight and sleek, its next album – will it come out next year? – might be one for the ages. - Popmatters
Discography
Still working on that hot first release.
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Bio
Jupe Jupe creates a dark and danceable soundscape: crooning vocals soar over pulsing beats as guitars and sax cut across panoramic washes of synth.
For its April 2023 full-length release on No-Count Records, "Midnight Waits for No One," the band spent two years during the global pandemic writing a 12-song collection of darkwave-pop hooks that temper melancholy subject matter with escapism and hope.
To record the album, Jupe Jupe teamed up with producer Evan Foster at No-Count studios in Seattle, WA. Foster is a member of Dirty Sidewalks, The Boss Martians, and The Sonics. Mixing the album was Matt Bayles, who worked on the two previous Jupe Jupe releases. A former member of Minus the Bear, Bayles has produced and mixed albums by Botch, Mastodon, Murder City Devils, He Whose Ox Is Gored, and more.
Since forming in 2010, the Seattle quartet has release six original albums--Invaders, Reduction in Drag, Crooked Kisses, Lonely Creatures, Nightfall, and now Midnight Waits for No One. The group also joined forces with a variety of renowned artists and producers for its remix album, Cut Up Kisses (featuring Lusine, Rick G. Nelson of The Afghan Whigs, Mike Simonetti, Erik Blood, and others).
Jupe Jupe is made up of My Young on vocals and synths; Bryan Manzo on guitar, bass, and saxophone; Patrick Partington on guitar; and Jarrod Arbini on drums and percussion. The four members are veterans of the Seattle and Austin music scenes.
HIGHLIGHTS:
Lonely Creatures made the top 30 list of most-added albums to US college radio in its first week and charted in the NACC top 200 for a month.
Crooked Kisses and Reduction in Drag charted in the CMJ top 200, and the track “Pieces of You” was selected for the CMJ March 2014 Mix Tape.
Jupe Jupe has played with The Ocean Blue, We Are Scientists, the Alarm, Yelle, the Pipettes, and other international artists.
In 2014, Jupe Jupe played the CMJ Music Marathon in NYC, and the song “Love to Watch You Fall” (remixed by Lusine) was featured on the CMJ October Mix Tape.
Songs from Reduction in Drag and Crooked Kisses were featured in two KEXP podcasts.
Jupe Jupe has performed at countless benefit shows supporting non-profit organizations: Dancing on the Valentine (Leukemia & Lymphoma), Teen Feed, NAACP Legal Defense Fund, and more.
The band was a featured artist and performed live on two episodes of the TV show, Band in Seattle.
PAST PRESS & REVIEWS:
“Dark, hook-filled post punk with atmospheric synths, moody guitars, mournful sax, driving rhythms and melancholy melodies.” KEXP
“Anyone with even a passive appreciation for expertly applied, fluid synth riffs, drama-filled vocals, infectious pop choruses, and deft dance-rock grooves will be able to ease right in.” ALL MUSIC
“There are sounds colored by breaths of Depeche Mode, Gary
Numan and OMD, and even some quick little winks and grins towards Haircut 100
and early Cure. But these are jumping off points. Sonic references to further
the genre and push it into the future. A future that is danceable, joyous, and
stained with beautiful melancholy.” BIG TAKEOVER
“Mining the new wave sound is nothing new, but the bands that make it work—Interpol, A Projection and now Jupe Jupe—make it feel instantly familiar and yet totally fresh and modern.” POPDOSE
“Coolly campy, exquisitely wrought electro-pop.” THE STRANGER
“Clearly, Jupe Jupe has honed its sound, and the end result is an enjoyable blend of the Strokes, Simple Minds and Duran Duran, with a slight hint of ‘70s prog.” POPMATTERS
“We accidentally caught a Jupe Jupe live performance down in Austin during South- By-Southwest. The memory, hazy by design and fuzzy by alcohol, stands out in a sea of bands that week.” VANYALAND “
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