Like fellow Frenchmen
Air and
Daft Punk,
M83's
Anthony Gonzalez has the knack for making sounds others might think of as outdated, or even tacky, into music that feels stylish and fresh.
Saturdays=Youth lives up to its evocative title, but the youth it captures is filtered through nostalgia for the unrepentantly fake sounds of the '80s, transforming them into delicate fantasy pop. Synths whoosh like wind tunnels and ping like lasers, guitars are whipped into ethereal froth, the drums are robotic and proud of it, and the production reproduces the cleaner-than-clean, almost brittle style of the era almost too perfectly. The largely instrumental "Couleurs" races through the night on synth and drum swells that haven't been heard since Miami Vice's heyday, while "Skin of the Night" sounds like it borrows
Phil Collins' kit from
No Jacket Required. Though
Saturdays=Youth often plays like a love letter to artists ranging from
the Cocteau Twins to
Mr. Mister, it never seems like an exercise designed to just re-create those sounds. The cinematic feel of
Before the Dawn Heals Us is stronger than ever here, from the 11-minute finale "Midnight Souls Still Remain," which unfolds like closing credits, to the Breakfast Club-meets-fashion shoot album cover, which makes
Saturdays=Youth appear to be the soundtrack to the most glamorous film
John Hughes never made. This hyper-stylized teen romance and angst drive the album, taking it to the highest highs and the lowest lows. "We Own the Sky" is jubilant, stretching out into a summery haze of airy vocals and synths; "Too Late" contemplates the end in melodramatic, ultra-romantic fashion, ending with a whispered "you, always."
Saturdays=Youth also features some of
M83's purest pop yet, which provide many of the album's standouts. "Kim & Jessie" heart-racing young love is one of
Gonzalez's finest sonic confections, along with "Graveyard Girl" and the
Kate Bush-worshiping "Up!," a sci-fi fairy tale that boasts some fittingly unearthly singing by guest vocalist Morgan Kibby. As super-stylized as its sounds and emotions are,
Saturdays=Youth always seems genuine, even when it feels like its songs are made from the memories of other songs. For all of its nostalgic haze, it's some of
M83's most focused music. ~ Heather Phares