Notes From Your BooksellerWhile we all excitedly wait for the film adaptation of her acclaimed memoir, Crying in H Mart, and the new music that her band Japanese Breakfast will create for it, let us get our Michelle Zauner fix by listening to this fine album. Where Crying in H Mart dealt with her grief after the passing of her mother, Jubilee is an album about joy. The lead track, "Paprika," is upbeat with drumming reminiscent of a marching band or carnival, setting the tone for the rest of the album.
Singer and songwriter
Michelle Zauner, aka
Japanese Breakfast, had a huge year in 2021. She released her first book, Crying in H Mart: A Memoir, which found her exploring her Korean heritage in the wake of her mother's death from cancer. The book reached number two on the New York Times nonfiction best-seller list and paved the way for her third solo album,
Jubilee. Released several months after Crying in H Mart,
Jubilee works as a beautiful companion piece to her memoir, showcasing
Zauner's poignant indie rock that manages to deliver big '80s-style pop hooks while still feeling rooted in her personal experiences. You don't need to read Crying in H Mart to vibe with
Jubilee, but it's nice to think that both the book and the album help to illuminate
Zauner's artistic point of view. As
Japanese Breakfast,
Zauner has always written songs that feel intimate, yet sonically expansive, but where her early work was more lo-fi (she initially started recording at home while taking care of her mother), over the years she's expanded her approach and become more confident in fleshing out her arrangements. On
Jubilee, she takes this expansion even farther, crafting sweetly attenuated anthems that balance her love of tropical '80s synth pop and '90s shoegaze with a sophisticated adult contemporary aesthetic. It's an attractive mix, rife with slippery bass grooves, Day-Glo synths, and icicle-crisp guitar riffs. But while her melodies are catchy, her lyrics remain as introspective as ever. Those who read Crying in H Mart will also recognize
Zauner's writerly knack for drawing upon specific images to better illuminate her emotions. On the string-accented "Kokomo, IN," she ruminates on how the feelings of a lost loved one can unexpectedly return, "manifesting like the fear of an oven left on." Even when she winks with a smiling sense of irony, placing a jazzy sax solo at the center of the buoyant
Sade-esque "Slide Tackle," her lyrics cut deep. She sings, "Don't mind me while I'm tackling this void." While there is a hooky pop quality to much of
Jubilee,
Zauner hasn't lost any of her artier, messier inclinations, as on the brooding "Sit," where she drenches herself in grayscale waves of electric guitar fuzz and keyboard squelch. For her longtime
Japanese Breakfast fans,
Zauner's one-two punch of having a major book success followed by an album that gets more attention might feel as if the mainstream world is finally discovering their secret pop crush. Thankfully, just as with Crying in H Mart,
Jubilee is an album that showcases
Zauner's talents to their fullest and makes crushing on
Japanese Breakfast hard to resist. ~ Matt Collar