Fluxblog
May 22nd, 2018 3:14am

Junk In The Snow


Joan of Arc “Punk Kid”

I have been following Joan of Arc’s career over the past 20 years or so, and I can say that despite how much they’ve changed from record to record, their new record 1984 is the first time when they’ve changed so much that they’ve become entirely unrecognizable. Everything is different. Tim Kinsella has been replaced on vocals by Melina Ausikaitis, who has a completely different approach to singing and lyric writing. The music is produced and arranged entirely by Nate Kinsella, whose elegant minimalism is a world away from the nervous energy of his brother’s usual work. I don’t quite understand why they’re even calling this record Joan of Arc – it just kinda isn’t, and I think it’s not entirely fair to Ausikaitis to force a comparison between this and anything from the band’s back catalog – but I do see how this radical change and deliberate silencing of the band’s mastermind is a very Joan of Arc move.

Melina Ausikaitis sings blunt, vivid lyrics about mostly bad memories with a disarmingly folksy tone. She sounds raw and vulnerable, which is quite a change for a band that’s always filtered emotions through layers of conceptualism and irony. (Not necessarily a bad thing, I should say.) “Punk Kid” is a story about being an awkward outcast rendered mostly in small details – the bits of youth that somehow stay in your mind fully intact while so much else fades in your memory over time. There’s a wounded pride in Ausikaitis’ voice when she sings “look at me, I’m a real punk kid,” and it’s all the more affecting as the music swells slightly, like the ghost version of a rock anthem.

Buy it from Bandcamp.

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