As an eighties kid, synth pop has been pumping in my blood ever since that first day I turned on my MTV. There’s some debate as to who’s considered a synth pop band and who isn’t. For this September Music Twitter challenge – #SynthPopSeptember – I’m focusing more on what’s considered synth pop, not who. The songs I’m featuring on Mental Jukebox this month aren’t solely composed of synthesizers. There may be drums, bass, and dare I say, electric guitars. But each of these songs were picked because the synthesizer is core to its being.
Back in 2009, a second wave of synth pop bands was rising. The bands that were leading the charge were Phoenix and MGMT. Their songs made you dance. They made you feel young again. Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix gave me a renewed interest in electronic music once again, like their French countrymen Daft Punk. Their synth lines hovered, floated and soared. They didn’t overpower you. This is sugary pop, not a rock and roll album full of bangers.
You don’t over explain songs like “Fences”. You just have fun with them. But I will say this. Phoenix, with these delicious pop songs, found their own brand of rhythmic hooks, lifting spirits with their pregnant pauses, tempo shifts and clever musical layering. “Fences” changed up the instrumentation in a way that made you feel like you were being ushered from one dance floor to another. This is a track that you can let loose to without rocking out.
“Once remembered now forgotten.”