Posts Tagged ‘Tops’

TOPS – ” Waiting “

Posted: October 21, 2021 in MUSIC
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Montreal band TOPS just started their North American tour and have just back with a terrific new single that is light and frothy but satisfying. Last July, Montreal indie-pop crew TOPS announced some tour dates and put out the new single “Party Again.” Today, they’re following that up with another new one called “Waiting,”  

Here’s what the band had to say about their latest, which puts Jane Penny’s breathy vocals at front and centre: I’m a very nostalgic person and the last year only made me more so. Nostalgia cuts both ways, memories of my past fed me during that time, but became so vivid that they began to seep the colour from the present. I wrote this song as a tribute to the early days of TOPS and the romanticized version that I have of those times, but it became an exploration of the effect of time in general. When I think back on my life, where am I?

Listen to “Waiting” below.

“Waiting” by TOPS ·

Tops are:Jane Penny · David Carriere · Marta Cikojevic · Adam Byczkowski · Riley Fleck Released on: 2021-10-19

Sugar at the Gate is their third full-length. While recording the album in L.A., the band lived at “Glamdale” – a former brothel turned mini-mansion in Glendale. The album seamlessly fits into that picturesque, breezy Californian aesthetic in a way that’s not cliché.

Vocalist-songwriter and frontwoman of TOPS, Jane Penny has a distinctive voice that’s nostalgic and smooth like honey; romantically weaving you through the album. Penny explains, “Living in L.A. was living out a teenage fantasy, living with your band and practicing in the garage. It was also the first time we’ve ever had that much space to make music.” After making quite the impression with Picture You Staring and charming us with their previous releases, TOPS seems to have taken the liberty to just have fun with Sugar at the Gate and talk about their deeper, real-time desires.

TOPS’ pop-punk vibe is what makes the band’s sound so loveable. The track “Petals” off the album is subtle in its euphemisms. Despite the song’s overt fluffiness, Penny sings, “All I wanna do is / call your name. / Let the petals fall away,” and the flower imagery further adds to that suggestion. The album’s title itself refers to “orgasm, but also carrot chasing, gatekeeping, and the social contract” (Arbutus Records). Jane Penny’s melodies in “Petals” are mysterious, alluring, and signal to her subconscious thoughts.

Sugar at the Gate, as a whole, is surprisingly cryptic, and slowly allows the budding flower of the album’s meaning to unfurl as the listener makes their way through the release. And yet, the album feels immediately convincing and real: it gives you same excitement as if smelling the freshly cut grass in the first days of summertime. Sepia-toned springtime scenes in L.A. are conjured in the music video for “Petals,” reminiscent of Girls’ youthful, garage-punk video for “Lust for Life” (2009). We’re taken on a dreamlike tour of Beverly Hills, with the main focus on a dress-up party. “Petals” encourages us to let loose and be ourselves; even if we’d secretly like to impersonate Madonna or Michael Jackson.

No matter what, all the releases by TOPS are filled with warmth and emotion. The way the syrupy melodies combine with their clean chords, restrained percussion, and alluring lyricism enables almost anyone to immediately connect with the fresh, wholesome sound of TOPS. At first listen, Sugar at the Gate could be deemed overly saccharine, but the production is so flawless they inevitably give you permission to revel in all of your rose-tinted dreams.

From TOPS’ LP “Sugar at the Gate”

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I’m a pretty huge fan of “Sophisti-pop” groups in the vein of Prefab Sprout and Aztec Camera, as well as ’80s post-punk and alternative, so it makes sense that TOPS produced one of my favorite albums this year with Picture You Staring, the Canadian group’s second full-length. Led by Jane Penny’s light-as-a-feather vocals and a minimalist yet affecting instrumental arsenal of guitars, rhythm, and occasional keys/synths, TOPS’ sound isn’t the type that will startle listeners or thrust them into some dramatic emotional spectrum. Basically, their sound’s effectiveness can appear muted initially, before their impeccable songwriting talents and emotional passion don’t take long to inspire. From brooding slices of jangly darkness like the genius “All the People Sleep” (my favorite) and gorgeously crawling “Sleeptalker” to the more immediate hookiness of “Change of Heart” or “Way to Be Loved”, “Picture You Staring” is an extremely solid showing from these Canadian talents. It’s also one of the most ideally fit for lush nighttime drives.

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Four piece guys and gals Canadian band from Montreal TOPS from the album “Picture You Staring” on Arbutus Records due this month.