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Music Review: Joyce Manor delivers nostalgia, polished and punk, in ‘I Used to Go to This Bar’

LOS ANGELES (AP) — In his seminal 1981 book “Simulacra and Simulation,” cultural theorist Jean Baudrillard argued that Disneyland is emblematic of reality’s collapse into perpetual imitation. “Disneyland is presented as imaginary in order to make us believe that the rest is real, whereas all of Los Angeles and the America that surrounds it are no longer real,” he writes.

On their seventh album, the LA county pop-punk stalwarts Joyce Manor remind listeners why the band’s origin lore, which involves day-drinking Four Lokos at Disneyland in 2008, is so apt. In the nearly two decades since their debut album, the band has descended further into millennial nostalgia, unironically cosplaying their ’00s influences with little creativity.

That’s not to say they haven’t maintained a loyal fanbase — if Baudrillard were alive, he may have chalked up Joyce Manor’s sound more to cultural fluency than creative stasis. In “I Used to Go to This Bar,” that yields about 20 minutes of nine polished, catchy tracks that will unapologetically transport listeners to the teen angst of the early aughts.

Much of the album, like its titular track and the existential dread-filled “The Opossum,” embrace pop-punk tropes, like power chords, simple lyrics and relentless tempo, to a tee. But a couple songs attempt ambition by incorporating additional, still nostalgic, sonic elements, like almost funky bass lines in “After All You Put Me Through” and monotone vocals on “All My Friends Are So Depressed.”

“Hey, you knew it all along / I was ashamed and I was wrong / Hit the bong, wrote a song / Fell asleep for way too long,” frontman Barry Johnson sings in his subdued, melancholic voice over jangly guitars.

What unites their pop-punk and these disparate styles is the unwavering commitment to the past — there is no realized innovation, but that doesn’t mean it’s not fun to listen to.

Joyce Manor has been ascribed unearned comparisons to Weezer and Green Day. In reality, “I Used to Go to This Bar” harks back to songs from bands with less staying power, but who were undoubtedly at one point in the zeitgeist.

“I Know Where Mark Chen Lives,” for example, opens with a guitar riff reminiscent of the opening to Yellowcard’s 2003 “Ocean Avenue,” and echoes its sense of youthful longing. “You fight back tears of frustration / As I search for something to say,” Johnson intones.

The mid-tempo power chords that open the album’s titular track are uncannily reminiscent of, if not a direct homage to, the beginning of Sum 41’s “Fat Lip” from 2001 — though “I Used to Go to This Bar” is more a wistful lament of grief and love lost than an anthem for teenage rebellion.

All this is not to say the album won’t satiate the band’s devoted fans, nor that it isn’t a mostly enjoyable listen. And in a contemporary culture tangled in a web of simulacra and simulation, perhaps that’s all that really matters.

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“I Used To Go To This Bar,” by Joyce Manor

Two stars out of five.

On repeat: “I Used to Go to This Bar”

Skip it: “Well, Whatever it Was,” “Well, Don’t It Seem Like You’ve Been Here Before?”

For fans of: The original Four Loko recipe, Warped Tour, teen angst in middle age

Dutch court allows rapper Ye concerts in the Netherlands

AMSTERDAM (AP) — A judge in Amsterdam on Wednesday rejected an appeal by a Jewish organization to block two performances by the rapper Ye, formerly Kanye West, ruling that the concerts are not a threat to public order. Ye has drawn widespread controversy in recent years for a series of antisemitic remarks, leaving Dutch authorities under mounting pressure to cancel the gigs on June 6 and 8. The Central Jewish Council filed the emergency lawsuit on Tuesday, arguing that Ye should be banned from the country for voicing admiration for Adolf Hilter and selling T-shirts featuring swastikas. According to the Amsterdam District Court, there were no grounds to bar Ye from performing. “There are no indications that West’s presence in the coming days will lead to concrete public order dangers,” the court said in a statement.
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