There have been a lot of great pop discoveries this year, and James K’s Friend was one of them. I’ve been listening to NTS a lot since Spotify invested in AI and other such nonsense, and every time James K appeared in a mix, it brought a breath of fresh air, a zone where she alone seemed to control the sonic weather for a brief respite.
The difference with much of what I listen to is that not only is Jamie Krasner’s voice very present, but it guides the music, whether through a sung melody or samples of his own voice. Some tracks delve deeper into shoegaze and allow the instrumental to expand, without ever straying from the vocal thread.
What’s striking is how the electronic effects reveal sharp shifts in atmosphere, like in a video game that scrolls through multiple stories within the same world. It’s a patchwork universe, heavily influenced by its collage approach: each song has a precise, contrasting, and textured arrangement. The album leaves very little room for silence, preferring to keep emotions suspended in a continuous flow.
The guitar is also very prominent: drenched in reverb, it envelops the vocals with an almost cinematic breadth, enhanced by collaborations that subtly color the alt-indie production. This marriage of dream pop and shoegaze electronica offers a surprisingly natural variety, where weighty ideas always remain suspended, supported by a sense of haze and propulsion.
Unlike her previous albums, which were entirely self-produced, here we feel that the New York artist exposes her strengths with more light, momentum and pleasure, as if she were opening the door to her private kingdom to let us observe the fragments, without ever losing control.























