Little Joy

31HlDofOQ2L. SL160  Little Joy

Product Description
Little Joy is Rodrigo Amarante (Los Hermanos), Fabrizio Moretti (The Strokes), and Binki Shapiro – three friends who got together to demo songs and produce this self-titled debut, named after their corner bar. Produced by Noah Georgeson (Devandra Banhart).
Little Joy

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5 Responses to Little Joy

  1. Victor Pereira

    This record reminds me a lot of great stuff, it sounds like Velvet Underground (“I’m sticking with You”, “After Hours” and all those cute songs), you can smell a little Beach Boys there too! Some reggae (probably Devendra’s influence…).

    It’s a shame that the whole cd plays for 30 minutes or so…
    Rating: 4 / 5
    Little Joy

  2. Adrian Ibarra

    even though they’re named after one of the crappiest ‘bars’ in LA and feature a guest appearance by one of the most overrated ‘artists’ in music (devendra craphart), this album is really great and kind of tropical and sunny and perfect music to listen you if you can’t wait for the idle of early summer. also it features adam green (what’s he been up to?) and nick valensi (my second favourite stroke after Fab) this album is awesome.
    Rating: 4 / 5
    Little Joy

  3. Daniel Terracina

    Nestled on the fabled Sunset Boulevard in sunny Los Angeles, a seemingly non-descript cocktail bar called Little Joy rests. To the casual observer, this bar may appear just like many other bars all over the country. However, one major difference exists between Little Joy and most local watering holes. This unassuming drinking establishment happens to have inspired the name of one of the best albums of 2008.

    Little Joy’s self-titled debut album, released November 4, 2008, is the brainchild of two established artists: Fabrizio Moretti and Rodrigo Amarante, of The Strokes and Los Hermanos, respectively. Moretti has already found a great deal of success in the music industry, as The Strokes were one of the leading bands in the garage rock renaissance of the early 2000s. So widespread was The Strokes’ influence that in 2002 the Strokes’ debut album became synonymous with New York rock.

    So what would cause Moretti to distance himself from his bread-winning day job and embark on a solo project? Perhaps he was inspired by some of his fellow band mates. Albert Hammond Jr. and Nikolai Fraiture, both members of The Strokes, have released financially and critically successful solo albums in the years following The Strokes’ last studio album.

    The eleven-song album is a chance for Moretti to flex his musical prowess. Picking up guitar, background vocals, and occasionally even melodica duties, Moretti definitely proves he is more than a drummer. The third member of Little Joy, Binki Shapiro, has a very unique voice. All of the tracks featuring Binki on lead vocals are definitely highlights (See “Unattainable”). Her quiet, effortless style of singing is reminiscent of a bygone era of female vocalists. Amarante plays guitar and is the lead singer. At times his singing is eerily similar to The Strokes’ frontman Julian Casablancas, but the tone and sound of these songs is so different than that of The Strokes that the similarity is a positive, not a cheap knockoff. The trio has mastered a folksy, surf-rock, melodic pop formula that absolutely works for them.

    While the entire album is solid, a few tracks about three quarters of the way through are a bit slow. The songs are mostly all short. Only three eclipse the three-minute mark. However, the weak points of this album are still far superior than the vast majority of music played on the FM stations today.

    The entire album is very laid back. This is perfect chill-out music. In fact, whenever one thinks of Amarante and Moretti spending time together in (the bar) Little Joy discussing grand ambitions of a new band, it is difficult to imagine any other kind of music playing the soundtrack to the scene. They have embodied an entire frame of mind with their album. Now that The Strokes are recording and an album and subsequent tour are on the not-too-distant horizon, it may be some time before the Little Joy triumvirate will be able to record a follow up. Until then, fans of easy listening, non-abrasive wistful pop can enjoy this album again and again.
    Rating: 4 / 5
    Little Joy

  4. Nancy Ng

    This album provides the back-drop to a chillaxin’ and cool summer with your favorite people. Good for folks who miss The Stokes and are a little older now.
    Rating: 5 / 5
    Little Joy

  5. Greg Kinne

    Little Joy is the side band of Fabrizio Moretti (The Strokes), his girlfriend Bikini Shapiro and Rodrigo Amarante (Los Hermanos). Having met at a Portuguese festival in Lisbon where both had performed, Moretti and Amarante struck up a friendship and decided to pursue musical projects together. Taking the name of a cocktail lounge in Los Angeles, Little Joy was formed. With the guidance and production of Devendra Banhart, the result is a record that is both retro and somewhat futuristic. Little Joy is decidedly mellow with its bossa nova grooves.

    While listening to this album I was continually reminded of the Bob Hope and Bing Crosby road movies, with Bikini Shapiro playing the foil between Moretti and Amarante. The album opens with “The Next Time Around” a Latin tinged campfire sing-along with dreamy three part harmonies. Oddly enough, the angular guitars riffs of The Strokes have been replaced by the jaunty rhythm of a ukulele on this track. “Brand New Start” is a breezy number that sounds like it could have played on the jukebox for the past thirty years.

    Other highlights, “Unattainable” and “Don’t Watch Me Dancing” feature the coy lead vocals of Bikini Shapiro. Backed by a spare guitar and harmony vocals this recording sounds like it could have been a rarity from the early 1950′s. “With Strangers” follows suit, and seems to be an answer to the lyric that “Unattainable” posed. The first single, “Keep Me In Mind” and “How To Hang A Warhol” finds the group reverting to lo-fi vocals and pointed rhythms reminiscent of The Strokes. By the time closer “Evaporar” comes around, you’ll want to hear the album again.
    Rating: 4 / 5
    Little Joy

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