
Not Not Fun and 100% Silk artist Maria Minerva has just announced details of her forthcoming album, entitled Will Happiness Find Me?
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Not Not Fun and 100% Silk artist Maria Minerva has just announced details of her forthcoming album, entitled Will Happiness Find Me?

Dalston’s annual Land Of Kings festival has reached its fourth year – and Juno Plus have a pairs of tickets to give away to the two day long festivities.

We’ll save you the usual rhetoric that surrounds these lists – that of it being hard to translate electronic music into the traditional long player format – and we won’t bother dissecting the argument that the modern consumption of music lessens the importance of albums; for our money there’s still nothing more rewarding that settling in and listening to an LP in its glorious entirety.
What we have done, however, is hand pick our 20 favourite albums from the past 12 months. Those of you who traverse these pages on a regular basis will see a liberal sprinkling of the artists and labels we’ve supported all year (and hopefully a couple of surprises too).
We have endeavored only to select albums that have truly moved us, ones that we find ourselves returning to again and again. In our minds 2011 was a vintage year for albums – the wondrous breadth of style and substance in our top 20 testifies to that – and we’ve included detailed descriptions of each release in our list for your reading pleasure.

Framed by an arch and surrounded by flashing blue fairy lights in an East End pub’s back room would generally be considered an odd way to see anyone perform, but somehow, in the case of Not Not Fun and 100% Silk artist Maria Minerva’s recent gig at Dalston’s Shacklewell Arms, the whole thing seemed totally appropriate.
Maria Minerva’s new album Cabaret Cixous has chiselled its way into our collective affections over the past few weeks, marking yet another highlight in the year of excellence that the LA boutique label Not Not Fun is currently enjoying.
Having broken through with the cassette-only album Tallin At Dawn released via the on-point Not Not Fun label back in March, it’s clear the smudged out, backwards glancing sounds of East London dwelling Estonian Maria Minerva have found favour with Amanda Brown and her blossoming retro-futurist empire. A subsequent release early in the life of 100% Silk helped establish the blossoming momentum that the NNF offshoot currently revels in, and now Cabaret Cixous, Minerva’s eagerly anticipated second album, arrives on more traditional formats courtesy of Not Not Fun.
It’s certainly a good time to be looking back and garnering the soulful drones of 80s synth pop, but that means there’s no shortage of competition. As Cabaret Cixous whirrs into life, the name bouncing round this particular reviewer’s head is Hype Williams, a correlation that you can’t help but think many other listeners will be finding. As with most associations of this nature, it’s unfair to dismiss the music as one and the same, but it makes for an ideal reference point. The same ethereal, degraded quality presides over the music, while Maria’s vocals float in the distance with that same intentionally off-point mixing.
However, there’s a greater consistency and immediacy at work on Maria’s album than you find on the Hype Williams output. Even when the style shifts to something bordering on uptempo it all fits the narrative of the LP as a whole. “Laulan Paikse Kaes” comparatively bangs, six tracks deep into the album, with a filtered electro break battling and losing against its processing whilst ravey sun-kissed chords reverberate around a subtle, almost G-funk synth refrain.
Indeed, as the album progresses beats begin to emerge, and on “Soo High” a positive groove can be discerned amidst the metallic fuzz. Minerva’s vocal takes on an electro-pop kind of delivery, while a funky bassline permeates through the mix, but only just. If any kind of sonic clarity was achieved on the album it would sound at odds with everything else, but it’s this commitment to the sound that achieves the consistency.
The only time the smoke lifts to let all the elements shine through is on album closer “Ruff Trade” where Minerva’s vocal turn takes the lead on top of an understated and moody synth. By the time the track opens up into a soaring chorus of sorts, you could be forgiven for forgetting that most of the album swaggers and sways bleary-eyed through Minerva’s layers of sound. If you weren’t sold on Hype Williams, this certainly won’t change anything for you. If, however, you’re easily seduced by their wistful swathes of sound then you should definitely give Cabaret Cixous a whirl.
Oli Warwick

Team Juno Plus is excited by the news that London based promoters BleeD are playing host to the first UK live performance of Estonian producer Maria Minerva.