Panik Ja Die Gruppe
Terrible times indeed. Discerning pop music fans will therefore be more than pleased that intellectual rock darlings Ja, Panik are back after a seven-year hiatus. This comes as somewhat of a surprise, given that in their 2016 band autobiography Futur II-published to mark their tenth anniversary-the Berlin-based quartet of Andreas Spechtl (vocals, guitar), Stefan Pabst (bass), Sebastian Janata (drums) and Laura Landergott (keyboards & guitar), pretty much announced their permanent dissolution. The Austrian band first emerged on the German music scene in 2007 with The Taste and the Money, a whirlwind of an indie rock album featuring gripping songs with incisive lyrics in the Ja, Panik trademark style of mixing both English and German. German music bible Spex magazine declared The Taste and the Money the most important German-language album in years. When their masterpiece "DMD KIU LIDT" was released in 2011, Ja, Panik broke out beyond the music magazines, with national papers raving over the album's virtuosic fusion of pop and politics. 2014's "Libertatia", a concept album inspired by the fictional pirate colony immortalised in a 17th-century pamphlet by Daniel Defoe, garnered similar praise. Never ones to repeat themselves, the eponymously titled "Die Gruppe" demonstrates that the four band members have been busy honing their craft, producing a sixth album that reveals a new level of artistic maturity. The eleven songs on the LP were recorded during the summer pandemic lockdown of 2020, which the band spent in their home region of Burgenland. The curfew issued by the Austrian government meant that band had to hole up in their makeshift studio, working on the material that Andreas Spechtl, singer and songwriter, had demoed earlier in the year while staying in Tunisia.The pandemic restrictions also meant that "Die Gruppe" was their first work to be self-produced. Some of the songs proved prophetic in quite an uncanny fashion..