Fate & Alcohol

News updates for 'Fate & Alcohol' by Japandroids

Japandroids post 2nd single "D&T" from forthcoming and final LP "Fate and Alcohol"

Vancouver anthemic indie punks Japandroids have just released the second single titled "D&T" from their forthcoming and final LP "Fate & Alcohol" set to release October 18, 2024 via Anti-Records. The new single follows lead off single "Chicago" which already proved Japandroids haven't missed a beat since their last output from over 7 years ago. "D&T", the latest single, can be streamed below and offers up another 3 minute anthem of the classic sounding raw, punky, and explosive sing-along Japandroids that we've come to love over their past 3 LPs. This new and final album is shaping up to be a great book-end to their 15+ year career.

August 14, 2024

On October 18 Japandroids will release Fate & Alcohol, their fourth and final full-length. Written in part while the duo—drummer-vocalist David Prowse and guitarist-vocalist Brian King—were touring behind their 2017 ANTI- debut, Near to the Wild Heart of Life, the album is at once a return to form and a thrilling step forward, a monument to the chemistry they’ve honed over nearly two decades side-by-side. It is their finest work to date, the sound of a band bowing out at the peak of their powers. While their scrappy 2009 debut LP, Post Nothing, brought them renown and critical acclaim outside of Vancouver, its thunderous 2012 follow-up, Celebration Rock, was a breakthrough on every level—a beloved, career-defining triumph that is still widely considered one of the best rock albums of the 21st century.

Recorded in Vancouver with longtime collaborator Jesse Gander, Fate & Alcohol finds them pursuing new ways to bottle that same rush - to write songs with the vitality and dynamic interaction of their early material, without sacrificing any of the nuance or ambition that marked  Near to the Wild Heart of Life. Nowhere is that more deeply felt than lead single “Chicago,” a song whose sheer momentum feels inevitable—from the romance of its opening chords to the snare-led explosions that see it through. 

"On our last record we wanted to broaden the definition of a Japandroids song,” King says, “and purposely left our demos quite open and malleable so that we had more flexibility to experiment in the studio. At the time, this approach was new and exciting, and inspired us to be bolder, to take more chances. We were aiming for a more cinematic take on our signature sound. This time, we tried to split the difference, and made certain that every song ripped in our jam space before Jesse ever heard it. If you listen to our first demo of "Chicago," it's obviously much rougher than what you hear on record, but it's all there. Even on a blown-out iPhone recording, the energy was obvious and the feeling cut through loud and clear."

But it goes deeper than that. If their last album Near to the Wild Heart of Life found the duo pushing themselves to write music that didn’t rely on (or simply recreate) the raw power and easy pleasures of Celebration Rock, Fate & Alcohol is meant to merge what they loved about both. “As a band, you always want to feel like you’re progressing while simultaneously preserving what's unique about you,” King says. “This record combines the energy and abandon of the first two with the storytelling of Near to the Wild Heart of Life—youthful exuberance but tempered with a point of view, of life lived.”

You can hear those ideas collide on “D&T,” a song on the new LP whose natural effervescence is shot through with glimpses of the morning after. On “Fugitive Summer,” King and Prowse come together for a coda that’s all cause and effect, a few seconds of catharsis in the name of coming clean. The sound is familiar but the feeling’s different—heavier, wearier, light years away from the cyclonic naïveté of 2009’s “Wet Hair” or the preemptive nostalgia of 2012’s “Younger Us," early highlights that could only be written by someone surfing one moment to the next. “These songs are a little more self-aware,” King says. “It's no longer just the night, but the next day too, which is something you think more and more about as you get older. Hangovers hit differently, as do the consequences of your actions.”

Listen to “Positively 34th Street,” and you’ll hear that growth. It’s a story of yearning and regret, of second chances. It’s a feat in restraint, a perfect song—all honeyed guitars and understated rhythms, gang vocals and timeless melody. It is also bittersweet, a lasting highlight from two people who were clearly meant to make music together. “I think it’s a lot like love,” Prowse says of their chemistry. “Not everybody gets to fall in love and not everybody gets to have a musical connection with somebody that is as intuitive and as exciting as the one I got to have with Brian. How would I even be able to begin to explain all of this to 23-year-old Dave, who’s just started jamming with his friend at a shitty little jam space or getting ready to play some dive bar in Vancouver to four people. How would I begin to explain to him? Just wait, man. You have no fucking idea what's going to happen.”

When asked to reflect on their career and all they’ve accomplished, both Prowse and King are hesitant to think in terms of legacy. They consider Fate & Alcohol a parting gift to fans, because Japandroids have approached every recording as fans themselves, from influences and ethics to artwork and merch. “I don't think we're the most technically proficient band in the world,” Prowse says. “And we're not the most original-sounding or challenging band in the world. But we've always put a lot of passion into what we do, and I think that's resonated with a lot of people. And I'm really grateful that we could be that band for people, in the same way that so many bands were for us.” 

Look back on their body of work and you’ll find songs that feel like they were written for this moment, for an ending. Songs of celebration and adventure and tomorrows deferred, but also, at their heart, songs about the fleeting nature of everything. If Japandroids wrote and played like this—a dream from the start—might end at any second, it’s because they knew it could. All great things do.