Join Us

Rate It! Avg: 3.5 (110 ratings)
Join Us album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 18   Total Length: 47:09

eMusic Review 0

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Heather Phares

eMusic Contributor

07.19.11
Skewing darker, but still appropriate for listeners of all ages
2011 | Label: Idlewild Recordings / TuneCore

It’s hard to resist the allure of a pink monster hearse, especially when They Might Be Giants are behind the wheel. The band’s first set of songs for adults in four years, Join Us not only restores their bite, it also recalls the vintage weirdness of albums like Apollo 18 and even their self-titled debut. At a healthy 18 tracks, the album spans the relatively straightforward power-pop of “Can’t Keep Johnny Down” to the psychic’s lament “You Don’t Like Me” with plenty of room for one-of-a-kind sketches like “Protagonist,” which boasts stage directions via deadpan backing vocals.

As Join Us‘s cheekily funereal artwork suggests, John Linnell and John Flansburgh’s sense of humor is particularly mordant this time around (maybe writing all those songs for kids finally got to them?) The normally mild-mannered pair are downright vicious on “When Will You Die?” where Linnell envisions the celebrations that will happen when a horrible, unnamed person finally kicks the bucket; “Judy is Your Viet Nam” compares a protracted, hopeless relationship to that protracted, hopeless war. Elsewhere, the Johns’ song fodder includes beheaded saints (“You Probably Get That a Lot”) a party for Banksy and Anonymous (“Celebration”) and brain-twisting time travel (the… read more »

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ready to rock/pop, with a side of weirdness

Wombat2000

After the enjoyable but not amazing Album Raises New and Troubling Questions, I’m really pleased with Join Us, which came out right about the same time. Unlike that album, Join Us is a full length album of new songs, all well-crafted and ready to rock. The album starts off with a straight-up rocking track, “Can’t Keep Johnny Down,” and then traverses through a variety of styles as is their usual wont: “Canajoharie” touches the face of the strange gods TMBG alone have access to, asking what sleestaks are–Land of the Lost characters, apparently; “Never Knew Love Could Be Like This” compares romance to cartography; “Spoiler Alert” features an excellent two-part lyric track, divided in stereo so one Jon/John is in each ear if you listen on headphones; last, “Three Might Be Duende” taps into the weirdness that reached its TMBG height in Apollo 18 and Flood.*

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Best In A While

richard.watson8

I am excited that this album is so listenable! They haven't put out an album in years that made me feel as close to the band as I once did, and this brought me back. I consider myself a diehard Giants fan and The Spine and The Else just left me longing for the good old days, but every single song here is solid. Their trademark humor is evident in '2082', Flansburgh's simple catchiness in 'Cloisonne' and 'Protagonist' and Linnel's soaring hooks in 'Canajoharie' and 'Can't Keep Johnny Down' make this album a return to our favorite Giants, and a must get if you've missed these guys at all.

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Best Grown-up record in a long time

frethepig

A lot of the old fun weird Giants in this -- though that never really went away, it just feels like more fun on this record. I guess.

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They Say All Music Guide

After nearly 30 years together, They Might Be Giants have established themselves not only as the quirky pop innovators and intrepid musical explorers, but as a bona fide pop institution. On Join Us, their 15th studio album, the Johns’ continue to build upon this solid foundation with a collection of songs that finds the band looking backwards as they move forward. Pulling elements from all of their past work, the album feels like a survey course in They Might Be Giants, touching on different points in their creative development yet still managing to feel like a cohesive collection of work. The opening track, “Can’t Keep Johnny Down,” is a Linnell-fronted midtempo rocker that feels a lot like “SenSurround” and “Till My Head Falls Off,” while later on we’re treated to “You Don’t Like Me,” which evokes the John Henry-era melodic, guitar-oriented songwriting that came about when the pair switched to a full band arrangement. They Might Be Giants don’t stop at the smoother, more polished work, though. Songs like “They Lady and the Tiger” and “Three Might be Duende” hark back to Linnell’s earliest works, smashing oddball arrangements, impossibly irreverent lyrics, and infectious vocal melodies together to re-create the sound that marked the experimental excursions of their new-wave period. Given its career-spanning sound, Join Us seems to be as much an invitation to TMBG fanatics to kick back and remember the good old days as it is a call to arms for new fans to delve into the bands back catalog with a collection of songs that’s as close to a retrospective of the band’s career as you can get without actually including any old songs. It’s this quality that makes the album not just an easy recommendation for listeners old and new, but one of their most fun, accessible, and solid albums since Factory Showroom. – Gregory Heaney

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