Friday, 12 June 2026

The Solid and the Hollow album review on Jittery White Guy Music..



We received a lovely album review for our 2026 album The Solid and the Hollow on the Jittery White Guy Music blog:

Been spending the past couple weeks cozying up with The Solid And The Hollow, the latest from UK indie pop band The Junipers. The band falls into my sweet spot of musicians who sound like they spent a few weeks hunkered down with their parents' copies of Revolver and Pet Sounds and decided to make an album--one of my favorite genres! There's a lot here that reminds me of Elephant 6 acts like the Olivia Tremor Control and Apples In Stereo, or Paisley Underground bands like Rain Parade, though they at times swap out some of the DIY edge for gentler sunshine pop. Beyond the slightly psychedelic baroque pop ("When She Turns," "She Makes The Sun Shine"), there's also some pretty straight jangle-pop out of the Teenage Fanclub/Cosmic Rough Riders playbook ("Where I'm Landing"). It's all really lovely, and has sent me scurrying through their back catalog to check out their prior records.


Wednesday, 10 June 2026

Kristan Reed Reviews our Album: The Solid and the Hollow...

 Kristan Reed kindly took the time to review our latest album. A great music blog, please visit HERE




It’s so gratifying when a band suddenly smashes it out of the park with the best album of their career. The Junipers have been quietly putting out whimsical psychedelic albums since 2008, ploughing their own particular melodic furrow to their loyal band of followers. They’re the classic Marc Riley band: they’ll show up for a session here and there, get a few spins on late night radio, go back to their day jobs, and cook up a new record when they have the time. Somehow, 21 years into their DIY career they’ve released one of the best albums so far this year.

From the moment Oneless chimes into the world, it’s clear they’ve hit upon magic. Those omnipresent late 60s influences have more of a late 80s swirl about them, and it suits them down to a tee. There’s a droning simplicity about it, where the guitars sit chiming away on two chords, allowing the dextrous bassline and Robin Gibson’s sublime vocals to carry the melody, with assistance from Joe Wiltshire and Ash Selden on harmonies. It’s one of those classic swirling album openers that lays out the welcome mat. If Teenage Fanclub or The Coral had put this out, it would be on heavy A list rotation, and we’d all be marvelling at their return to form.



No sooner has that chiming masterpiece finished, they smash out another of their best-ever tunes in When She Turns—an acid-fried piece of pop psych out of the top drawer, with its fuzz bass riff thundering along, and all the levels bleeding into the red. Snugly compacted into 2 minutes 28, they don’t waste a moment, Rickenbacker jangling along while the ace hook line “She turns me on” provides the necessary swirl. It’s 1966 The Who meets The Jam meets The Creation, in one bite sized mod psych nugget. A stunning tune.

She Makes The Sun Shine bathes in the same citrus soaking sunshine that the paisley shirt-era Stone Roses positively revelled in for a time. It knowingly sticks in one of those bass riffs Mani would have gone for, while the 12 string chime weaves its magic around their verdant harmonies. The sound of this record is no doubt something the band worked tirelessly on, and they absolutely nail that crunchy warm analog tape saturation thing that retro heads are obsessed with. It captures that band-in-the-room sound so well, using production trickery in the best possible way—it’s ridiculously difficult to get bands to capture their live sound this way, and this has the feel of artisans at work. Lee Mavers would be proud. 60s dust and all that.

You might expect the album to be front-loaded, as they often tend to be, but the hits keep on coming, with Fishes another classy number, with that Ogden’s Nut Gone Flake organ swirl a brilliant touch. They always have a knack of picking a simple riff to work around, and their embellishments always work out—their sonic decision making is outstanding. When the shimmering guitar overdubs glide in, they create their own little psychedelic bubble. Meadow Song is the first one to take things down a notch, picking up the 12-string acoustic and serenading you, laid down under the baking sun on a picnic blanket. “The solid and the hollow/Appear the same/There’s warmth between the shadow/But I can’t stay/That’s just the way”. They turn up the wistful whimsy to 11 on this one, but with a clear-eyed sincerity that works. It’s a beautiful diversion—positively Abbey Road levels of dizzying melodic craft at work here.



Well that was a hell of a Side 1. How can the flip side possibly match all that? They give it a good go with Swan, another lush, mid-tempo number of glorious construction—all swimmy acoustic strums, delicate organ and golden harmonies wafting all over the place. At once a simple song, but pieced together in a way that makes it much greater than the sum of its parts—that’s the real skill of this band, of knowing what works best, and where. Where I’m Landing is another maximum guitar number—it kind of reminds me of that sound Ride were shooting for on Carnival Of Light—only The Junipers do it better, with capos high on the frets, bass sashaying all over the place like Macca on uppers.

No late 60s inspired album would be complete without a sprig of sitar, and they gleefully dispense it on Who Can Say?, which turns a simple acoustic strummer into something bigger and brighter, with its beautiful finger picking figure and sitar drones/plucks garnishing it perfectly, Ash delivering one of his brilliantly busy basslines as a extra melodic engine. In A Maze delivers a late highpoint, finding the band in full pop ditty mode, casually dishing out yet another ear worm. For the climax, the band goes full Brian Wilson-on-the-piano, giving another deliriously gorgeous tune in Moments Of Truth. Beach Boys-meets The Cyrkle is, unsurprisingly a mode that suits them completely.

By the end of the record, it’s fully apparent they can change lanes whenever they like—whatever they turn their hands to on this record they nail 100%. I’d like to think the word of mouth on this album will be sufficient that it will translate into meaningful success. I know it’s virtually impossible for DIY bands to get anywhere (other than occasionally playing around home city Leicester and surrounding Midlands towns). But one of the established bigger bands should insist they become their tour support, and get them out to a wider audience. It’s the least they deserve for making one of the albums of the year.


Junipers Interview in Shindig Magazine...

We were interviewed by Michael Bjorn for the May edition of Shindig Magazine. We chat about our album The Solid and the Hollow:


 What’s real and what's not?

UK psych-poppers The Junipers’ fifth album finds them on solid ground. Michael Bjorn tunes in.

The cover of The Junipers' The Solid And The Hollow screams psychedelia. The music however, as is always the case with the Leicester quartet, more subtle. While grounded in 60s references, it conveys a sense of timelessness.

Songwriting multi-instrumentalist Joe Wiltshire and singer/guitarist Robyn Gibson had both recently been rediscovering stuff from their youth. “The first music I got into really deeply was '60s stuff. The Beatles Anthology was coming out, and it was all Britpop,” says Joe. “I was uncool at school because I liked the Beatles,” remembers Robyn. “But everybody caught up with me later on.” Joe then dusted off a song he had written in his teens.  “We did a crappy demo when we were kids,” he says. ‘She Makes the Sun Shine’ captures that sweet innocence, now enhanced by Robyn’s smooth vocals.

Having reformed the lineup from formative second album Paint the Ground, the idea was to make a guitar based record. But what is imagined doesn’t always become real, as Joe couldn’t keep his hands from twiddling lots of knobs in his studio. “We'd have like four hours at the studio once a week, and then I'd spend the rest of the week tinkering around,” he says. “I was blown away by drummer Ben Marshall and bass player Ash Selden,” adds Robyn. “They were doing everything in about two takes.”

Meadow Song’ is somewhat of a centrepiece, providing the album’s title with the line: “The solid and the hollow / appear the same”. “It's like a paradox. What’s real and what's not,Joe explains. “The album is like a marquee; ‘Meadow Song’ is the main pole and everything comes down from that like an umbrella,” adds Robyn.

Another tent pole, then, is ‘Swan’. “That was the first one,” says Robyn. “We had a go at it in my living room before we took it up to the studio.” Gently brimming with the band’s trademark ethereal softness, it’s irresistible.

Where I'm Landing’ was inspired by Joe taking care of his daughter. “She has lots classes to do in town and I have to wait . I'll spend two hours waiting in a car park somewhere, wanting to be somewhere else,” he says with a smile. “There's quite a lot of places to escape to on the album,” concludes Robyn.

There’s however no escaping on ‘In A Maze’. “When I get stuck inside I don’t want to get out,” sings Robyn. That also sums up listening to The Junipers: Captivating. Who needs an escape?




Live Date Confirmed: Firebug, Leicester 14th Aug 2026..

 We play Firebug in Leicester on Friday 14th August 2026. Details are HERE



Shindig! Magazine Album Review - The Solid and the Hollow..

Shindig! Magazine have given us a lovely album review for The Solid and the Hollow. This edition of Shindig is a Lemon Twigs special which also includes features on Sharp Pins, Mod Lang, Uni Boys, Tchotchke, The Jam, Little Barrie and and an interview with us.

Buy the album on our Bandcamp

Fifth album in for this Leicester group and, as ever, the goods are delivered in abundance. From Robyn Gibson, Joe Wiltshire and Ash Selden's blissful and melodic / harmonic blend, to the rhythmic percussion shifts played by Ben Marshall and all the incisive guitar jangling.

It’s all about light, shade, colour and depth with regard to many of this album’s songs, where the likes of fuzzy, towering psych-popper ‘When She Turns’ and stunning “vintage windfall” track ‘She Makes The Sun Shine’ take centre stage; mesmeric, resonant and vital, yet others too are more than capable of soul-stirring action and lodge themselves equally in the listener’s mind; ‘Swan’, the reflective yearn of ‘Where I’m Landing’, the utterly spellbinding ‘Who Can Say’ as well as keyboard-led ‘Moments Of Truth’ are but a few. Total magic, pure and simple!

Buy this edition of Shindig Magazine


Tuesday, 12 May 2026

Meadow Song - Single Review by The Reconnoiter..



A peaceful meadow-like inner space that initially feels like refuge from pressure and pain.  Over time, the person realizes this calm place may blur reality and stall emotional growth, revealing a deeper truth that cannot be ignored.  In the end, the pull toward awareness disrupts the comfort, suggesting that staying in illusion is no longer possible.  It’s another fave song from the fifth album by the Leicester, England-based band. 

Buy and listen here!

The Solid and the Hollow - Album Review by The Active Listener...

 


"The Junipers have gifted us with yet another instant classic. Absolutely essential listening for anyone with an ear for timeless pop music."

Great to see a new release from another of our old favourites, this time Leicester’s The Junipers. 

I've loved everything they've released, and that status quo remains unchanged here. If anything, they're getting better.

The Junipers are one of those bands whose albums sound very carefully crafted in the studio, but also give the impression that if you wandered into their rehearsal space on any given Sunday afternoon you’d hear something with equal polish. It all sounds so natural and unlaboured that it’s hard to reconcile these guys having to go off and do day jobs as it sounds like they do this 24/7. It’s unjust for someone to do something this well and not be able to earn a full time living from it. 

But what does it sound like you ask? A more democratic Wings. A contemporary Honeybus. A more pastoral Teenage Fanclub. Just go and listen to it.

With The Solid and The Hollow, the Junipers have gifted us with yet another instant classic. Absolutely essential listening for anyone with an ear for timeless pop music.  

Buy on vinyl, CD or digital here!

The Solid and the Hollow - Album Review by Power Popaholic..


"There are lots of great moments within the songs that evoke a mood akin to a bright summer day"

Robyn Gibson (lead guitar, vocals) says it best, “… it became a kind of nostalgia trip,” and the band’s fifth album keeps those stylistic touches that recall The Beatles, The Association, and The Free Design. “Oneless” is a subtle opener, with Gibson’s gentle vocal leading the way. It’s the template for most of the songs to follow, with the exceptions being the driving bass line lead on the psyche-pop of “When She Turns” and spacey synths on “Fishes.”

There are lots of great moments within the songs that evoke a mood akin to a bright summer day. “She Makes The Sun Shine” is especially buoyant with a rhythm line akin to The Beatles’ “Rain.” “Meadow Song” has a wonderful mix of keys, guitars, and layered sounds, and slowly builds into something great. “Swan” is another breezy melody that wallows in the dreamlike atmosphere, with subtleties in the harmonies that audiophiles will appreciate. If you fell in love with this band from their super catchy ‘Euphonious Trolley’ EP, this album is its spiritual cousin. Highly Recommended.

The Solid and the Hollow - Album Review by I Don't Hear a Single..

"The Junipers have never released a duff album. I'm deliberately trying not to mention songs because this is a proper album to be listened to from start to finish. Absolutely essential"

 Just as with David Brookings, I return to our very early days, a decade ago, when I reviewed The Junipers' Red Bouquet Fair. I've been with them ever since and enjoyed Robyn Gibson's Bob Of The Pops adventures through the period to now.

A new Junipers album is also a reason to celebrate as they bring my beloved Psych Pop back to life. More recently, the quartet have been as interesting as ever, but been a little more mellow. None of that here, this is a real Guitar album, back to earlier days and a full revelation of how great Psych Pop is. 

The Solid And The Hollow not only makes an old man very happy, but is also one of the best psych pop albums for a long time.The whole thing is beautifully arranged, the instrumentals are works of art and show off Gibson's dulcet tones beautifully. 

It really sounds as though it could have been recorded in those hazy 60's days when the genre took off. But there are also hints of the late 80s revival. The album offers up both beat and the more mellow, but all are arranged perfectly, providing a dreamlike vibe or a killer Psych Beat. 

I'm deliberately trying not to mention songs because this is a proper album to be listened to from start to finish. But as you head over you may want to compare the 60s Beat of When She Turns with the wonderful Piano led closing masterpiece that is Moments Of Truth.

In between you get everything that the band is great at, Mellotron, jangle and stunning mood setters. The Junipers have never released a duff album, but this is more of a Guitar album, a step back to the early days if you like and no one masters Psych Pop like these four. Absolutely Essential!

Tuesday, 31 March 2026

NEW SINGLE RELEASE - IN A MAZE - OUT FRIDAY 3RD APRIL

 The 2nd single from our new album The Solid and the Hollow is out now. If you pre-order the album you will receive all the singles taken from the album before the album is released. Pre-order the album HERE.

It's an upbeat track about being in chaotic situations but being happy and having it any other way even if you could change things. It's also about thinking you know what's what and learning that you probably don't, and no one does. No particular inspiration from other bands we don't think, the chord sequence just fell out an acoustic guitar one night, nice when that happens. Hope it's to everyone's taste anyway : )

Lyric video is live on YouTube Watch Here.





ALBUM REVIEW - THE POP CORPS REVIEWS THE SOLID and the HOLLOW

 



There’s no two ways about it – in terms of inventive, kaleidoscopic music, there’s few groups that get close to The Junipers. From 2008’s ‘Cut Your Key’, they burst onto the scene marrying the sounds of the deep-cut psychedelic 45s from your collection, to the joyful pop of Wings-era McCartney, Gilbert O’Sullivan and Emitt Rhodes, with the toytown symphonies of Curt Boettcher, Brian Wilson and Mark Wirtz.

Without all the fuss of fanfare, their albums wouldn’t so much get released, but rather, emerge from whatever multicoloured world The Junipers reside when they’re hatching up new music. People will tell you they’re just some good blokes from Leicester – but when these records appear, it feels more like they’re hanging around in The Sea of Holes or something.

Now, quite by surprise, they have appeared again, fully formed and ready to let us into their world with a new record called ‘The Solid And The Hollow’, which again, showcases some of the finest music you’re likely to hear.

Fans of the band are borderline evangelical about the sunshine folk-rock, psychedelic twists and turns, and the pure rush of unadulterated pop that they continually deliver. Maybe that’s because we can imagine an alternative universe where some wealthy benefactor is able to just keep them on some record company books and pour enough money into them to keep us in music that nourishes and makes us feel better.

Over the years, the shifts in musical style have been subtle and smart, never once sounding like one of those terrible throwback groups that are more Beatle Fancy Dress Wig than they are embodying the creativeness of the psychedelic period.

This time around, that brilliant and familiar Juniper sound is there, but now, it’s been cut with something different.

From album opener, we see an almost slowed-down, dreamier take on Freakbeat with ‘The Oneness’, and later, ‘Where I’m Landing’ gives us a relaxed version of Power Pop that really ticks all the boxes.

‘In A Maze’ and ‘Swan’ have a bit more bite, although, still easy-does-it, bringing to mind Arthur Lee’s Love, The Byrds, and a host of uptempo jangly pop bangers, but still very much in the framework that makes Juniper records so magical and rewarding.

‘When She Turns’ – the track that was released ahead of the album to whet our appetites – is a much more muscular affair that, coupled with ‘Fishes’, melds Motorik madness with the swirling, heady, heavy psychedelic rock that is welcomed, even if it might make you leap out of your seat!



It’s not all change – the music you associate with records past is still very much present, with ‘Meadow Song’, ‘She Makes The Sun Shine’, ‘Who Can Say’ are sugary and sweet, clever and gorgeous and ‘Moments Of Truth’ allow for an experience that can only be likened to the pocket symphonies of Brian Wilson when he grew his beard out.

Throughout, the harmonies are green and lush, and the melodies are plucked out of some perfect pop songbook, and there’s baroque, jangle pop, sensational production, DIY rough-and-readiness and all-in-all, we find ourselves bathing in the whole thing, thrilled that they’ve blessed us with an invite into their universe.

You can almost hear the perimeters of their influences expanding ever so gently, with all the usual pillars of their music present, but also, echoes of garage punk, shoegaze, and Paisley Underground’s swirly grittiness.

This is an album worth raving about and utterly essential.

‘The Solid And The Hollow’ is out April 24th and you can pre-order your copy here.



Wednesday, 25 March 2026

WE PICK OUR MOST INFLUENTIAL PSYCHEDELIC TRACKS for STRANGE BREW POD..

We were asked by The Strange Brew Podcast to pick our most influential psychedelic tracks. We've not gone monster rare here or anything, and pretty obvious.. but you can't lie about what has had the biggest impact on you. See the full article HERE.

The Junipers’ Favorite Psychedelic Tracks

Twenty years in, Leicester’s The Junipers are still making psychedelic pop that sounds like a Saturday morning radio discovery and a dusty record find in a town centre shop. To follow up their brilliant 2024 album, Imaginary Friends, they release their fifth LP, The Solid and the Hollow, on 24 April.

By their own description it ended up as a nostalgia trip of sorts, imagining how they might have approached music as teenagers, when the 60s and indie records they love were still fresh discoveries. 60s garage, 80s neo-psychedelia and early 90s shoegaze all fed into it, pushing them toward a more guitar-led sound than recent albums. They even went back and reworked a song they wrote as teenagers, ‘She Makes the Sun Shine,’ which became a kind of anchor for the whole record. Having heard it, I can tell you it delivers on every one of those influences while sounding completely like itself, which is a harder trick to pull off than it sounds. If you want a way in, their current single ‘When She Turns’ is out now, with ‘In A Maze’ to follow on 4 April.

To mark the release, we asked the band to share the psychedelic tracks that mean the most to them. Mellotrons feature heavily.

The Beatles – Strawberry Fields Forever

Joe: It’s an obvious one but it is probably my favourite track of all time. It’s not like I listen to it all the time nowadays, but when I do it always has an impact. Nobody needs this track breaking down for them of course, but I love its mystery, how it starts out soft and mellow, and ends heavy with a crazy mellotron jam at the end. The whole production, how they spliced together 2 takes in slightly different keys, and actually went with it. The most ambitious single yet, by the biggest band in the world, and they released a mash up of 2 different takes that were in different keys and tempos to one another. But it works and actually makes the track sound weirder and more ethereal, like it wasn’t made by humans. And apparently it still wasn’t to Lennon’s liking because it wasn’t heavy enough. I’d love to hear the version he had in his mind. I’m also a sucker for anything from the 60s and 70s with a mellotron and this song is the reason.



Pink Floyd – See Emily Play

Joe: Like ‘Strawberry Fields,’ this track is a pretty obvious choice but it had such a big impact. I first heard this on Sounds of the 60’s which I’d listen to as a teen religiously every Saturday morning in bed. I’d hear new stuff (to me) all the time and then spend that afternoon hunting the records down in town. To me at the time this was like hearing ‘Strawberry Fields’ mark II. I love the vocals, the melody, the vibe, the singalong chorus, the sped up interlude, those orchestral bits that open the verses, the way Syd sings “tomorrow”! I remember buying that First 3 Singles CD and blasting it out later that day and my Dad just opening my bedroom door and looking at me gone out.


July – My Clown

Joe: I remember the first time I heard this was at one of the Mousetrap nights in London in like 2001 or something. I didn’t know the track, but it was in my head for months afterwards, until me or Pete managed to track it down. To hear a track like this for the first time at full blast in a basement is the perfect introduction. At that time I didn’t know what I was listening to! I knew it would be from 1968 or 69 but it was just so far out, I couldn’t absorb it or work out how this sound had been made. I remember I ordered the CD of the album and it came through the post on a Saturday morning. No one home , and I was blaring this track out on the kitchen CD player, my Dad came home and was just going “what is this?? Far out man!!” all sarcastic. We actually got to support Tom Newman and July in about 2016 which was nice.


Marmalade – Man in a Shop

Robyn: The crystal clear production, those guitars and pop hooks. The works! They play 2 basses on it too, as they did on ‘See the Rain.’ One plays more basic around the root notes, and one is more twangy and melodic like a John Entwhistle bass line. We’re all suckers for the poppier side of psychedelia and this one is a classic of that genre.


Tomorrow – Claramount Lake

Ash: This is right up Ash’s street. A tight, crunchy, funky band performance. Ash’s mum had the single of Tomorrow’s ‘My White Bicycle’ and this was the b-side, so he was introduced to this track early doors.


Honeybus – Under the Silent Tree

Ben says: Would you say Honeybus are psychedelic? I’m terrible with genres and labels.. like it’s just music maaaan! ‘Under the Silent Tree,’ that’s a good one. But yea, Honeybus are a favourite of all of ours and they definitely dabbled in psychedelia and this track also has a mellotron.



LIVE DATE CONFIRMED - THE JUNIPERS GIG

 We play our first gig in 10 years on Friday 1st May 2026. It will be as part of the psych event Freakout, held at The Night Owl in Birmingham. Our new album is out the week before an we will be playing new songs with some of the old ones. It should be a good night with support from psychedelic covers band The Mystery People and psychedelic DJ's. 

Tickets available HERE




NEW ALBUM FOR 2026 - PRE-ORDER "THE SOLID AND THE HOLLOW" NOW...

 We're happy to announce that we have a new album to be released April 24th 2026. The Solid and the Hollow is available for pre order from our Bandcamp page now. 

Available on vinyl, CD and digital.

We started this project heading in a slightly different direction to where we ended up. As it progressed it became a kind of nostalgia trip — imagining how we would have approached music as teenagers, when so much of the 60s and indie music we now know and love was brand new to us. It made the whole process feel fresh and exciting to make.

We've actually included a song written in our teens called She Makes the Sun Shine — albeit updated and slightly different from the original — and it gave us a good springboard for the vibe we were on.

We were listening to a lot of 60s garage, 80s neo-psychedelia and early 90s shoegaze during its production, which pushed us toward a more guitar-led sound than our previous two albums. We felt we hadn't made a proper guitar album since Paint the Ground and decided it was time to get the amps out again. 

We will be playing our first live gig in 10 years to support the release on 1st May in Birmingham. Tickets available HERE.

Pre-Order available now: The Solid and the Hollow | The Junipers






NEW JUNIPERS SINGLE FOR 2026 - WHEN SHE TURNS..


We have released our first single from our 2026 album The Solid and the Hollow. Buy here: When She Turns (Single 2026) | The Junipers
Our new album is also now available for pre orders: The Solid and the Hollow | The Junipers
When She Turns came about after a long drive home — turning the organ on and just holding a long distorted note and gradually drenching it in more distortion and tremolo. We'd had the chorus line for a few years and it fit perfectly dropping into that sustained organ note.
We had a bit of fun making a little video for it too, which you can find on our YouTube channel: www.youtube.com/@TheJunipersUK


The Junipers - When She Turns (Lyrics)

lyrics

When She Turrns (Lyrics)

She planted a seed but didn't know
That it would make a garden grow
She waters the flowers, now I find
That they are growing in my mind

When she turns it on
And she turns it on

I drop to the floor and forget about time
It feels like springtime in my mind
The world is in colour from black and white
My body is drowning in sunlight

When she turns it on
And she turns it on

When she turns it on
And she turns it on

Monday, 13 January 2025

NEW JUNIPERS SIDE PROJECT YELLOW PEGS CD

During 2020 and 2021 many of us had lots of time on our hands, to do the garden on a daily basis and start some new projects. Well between gardening, daytime naps and listening to lots of old folk albums like Vashti Bunyan "Just Another Diamond Day", Bill Fay "Grandfather's Clock", Donovan "Gift From a Flower", Tyrannosaurus Rex "Unicorn" and a load of self released rarer stuff like Midwinter, Courtyard Music Group, These Trails etc, we got the old tascam 4 track cassette recorder out and started to record an album of simple, wobbly folky songs. This came out under the moniker Yellow Pegs and released it on a home made CDR and cassette. We now have a limited amount of professional CD press' in a mini lp style card sleeve which includes bonus tracks. They are available now with a free download of the digital version on our bandcamp page HERE!






Shindig Magazine Review:
"While everyone & everything is on hiatus, Joe Wiltshire of Leicester psychedelic poppers The Junipers has had time to create this short, home-recorded album of largely acoustic, folky material on a four-track cassette recorder.
Stripped of his main project's usual baroque-pop production, tracks do begin & often end abruptly, in improvisatory fashion, but these aren't demos - nor is he overly reliant on the wonky lo-fi aesthetic. For one thing the sheer amount of instrumentation on here is a cut above the usual four-track fare - acoustic guitar, bass, drums, multi-tracked voice, mellotron, celeste, harmonium, piano, the list goes on. But all are used judiciously to produce an accomplished & charming set of songs, none of which overstays it's welcome, or really even gets comfortable at all - the 16 tracks here take up just 27 minutes. It'll be interesting to see if any get fleshed out for the next Junipers album proper."



Tuesday, 31 December 2024

IMAGINARY FRIENDS ALBUM REVIEW in LEFTLION MAGAZINE...

 Album: The Junipers - Imaginary Friends

Featuring their crispest and most refined sound yet, The Junipers’ fourth record is an album that feels at once fresh and familiar. Though unapologetic in its 60s psychedelic roots, Imaginary Friends oozes confidence and originality. From the delicious distorted groove of album highlight While You Preside to the plaintive lilt of Red Song, the Leicester quartet show the full range of their musical and lyrical abilities. Whimsical storytelling, spotless production and layered harmonies Brian Wilson would be proud of - all these combine to make Imaginary Friends a joyful listen, start to finish. @thejunipersband (Sam Marshall)

Read the full article HERE



IMAGINARY FRIENDS NUMBER 3 in POPGRUPPEN BEST of 2024

We are very happy Junipers to have our album Imaginary Friends included in Popgruppen' best albums of 2024. Read the full article here
Buy the album here



Friday, 27 December 2024

JUNIPERS ALBUM IMAGINARY FRIENDS NAMED BEST ALBUM OF 2024 in POP CORPS..

Chuffed to bits to have our album Imaginary Friends names best album of 2024 on The Pop Corps. We put a lot of work and love into the album so this makes it all worth it. We had a decent response to the album in general. A few plays on BBC radio in the midlands and 6 music. Sold out of the first batch of CD's and all of the vinyl and seemed to pop up on a few peoples best of the year lists, we can't ask for more than that : )

ALBUM OF 2024: THE JUNIPERS

We reviewed
The Junipers newest LP in full here, but for those who don’t want to click a link, in what ended up being a quite difficult decision thanks to the strength of the pack, we decided that Kendrick Lamar' album may have been influenced by some recency bias, it was a straight dogfight between Dina Ogon’s ‘Orion’, and Fabiana Palladino’s self-titled debut, and our eventual winner, The Junipers.





Pure sunshine and inventive playfulness throughout, The Junipers once again reminded everyone that there’s simply no-one else like them. Uplifting melodies, everything and the kitchen sink approach and more hooks than a fisherman’s shed. Absolute perfection, top to bottom.


https://youtu.be/6j_u_X8Ocag?si=c44R_Fw6aI0Bqj-1

IMAGINARY FRIENDS makes SHINDIG MAGAZINES TOP 20 ALBUMS of 2024...

We are absolutely delighted to have made Shindig Magazine' top 20 albums of 2024. Its our favorite magazine so we're over the moon with this.

1 The Lemon Twigs - A Dream is All We Know

2 The Soundcarriers - Through Other Reflections

3 Daniel Romanos Outfit - Too Hot to Sleep

4 Project Gemini - Colours & Light

5 Paul Weller - 66

6 Jessica Pratt - Here in the Pitch

7 Goat - Goat

8 Beautify Junkyards - Nova

9 Gruff Rhys - Sadness Sets Me Free

10 The Courettes - The Soul of the Fabulous Courettes

11 Moon - III

12 Kit Sebastian - New Internationale                            

13 Bananagun - Why is Bananagun?

14 2nd Grade - Scheduled Explosions

15 MJ Lenderman - Manning Fireworks

16 Susan James - Time is Now

17 The Junipers - Imaginary Friends

18 Shadow Show - Fantasy Now

19 Mystery Lights - Purgatory

20 The Prisoners - Morning Star

Saturday, 23 November 2024

2024 JUNIPERS INTERVIEW with MICHAEL BJORN in SHINDIG MAGAZINE..




Fittingly for a late 60s inspired record, the new JUNIPERS album is an unplanned love child. Joe Wiltshire and Robyn Gibson tell Michael Björn how one thing led to another.


To the delight of sunny psychedelic pop lovers, after eight years The Junipers are back with Imaginary Friends. It started when Robyn was recording the Portable Radios sophomore album. We managed to persuade Joe to play bass,” says Robyn. So that got me and Joe kind of doing bits over in Leicester.” 

Their first idea was to re-record the Junipers’ debut album Cut Your Key since they did not have ownership of the original. However, when a reissue deal was struck with the original label, attention instead turned to new material. We had about four new songs,” says Joe who is the songwriter of the pair. I showed them to Portable Radio, thinking perhaps we could do it with them.”

But accidental momentum took over and the songs just kept on coming. The sessions were just so easy,” says Robyn. Wed pop over to the Juniper studio for two or three hours, once or twice a week, and come out with maybe one and a half songs recorded.”

Soon the two had taped almost an albums worth - but decided to also include My Imaginary Friend’ — the last group recording made in late 2017 just before their guitarist Peter Gough got ill and the band activity petered out. I wanted to do our own Martha My Dear. Theres an Emitt Rhodes track, She's Such A Beauty, and I wanted something like that,” explains Joe. But we've not got a dog, so we made one up, like a Rutles thing!” 

With some parts recorded by the full lineup, the music feels like a direct continuation from previous album, Red Bouquet Fair. It's good that it doesn't stick out,” says Robyn. Nobody seems to have noticed the change in line-up.”


And judging from the sheer quality on display, great tunes seem to have been piling up over the inactive years, all in their signature warm and friendly style. It's like a summer haze that's shimmering in and out,” says Robyn. ”Its nice to make something that makes you smile,” adds Joe. Some songs are probably a bit saccharine, but as you build them, you try and steer it away from that a bit.” But while the production indeed layers psychedelic sounds and playful overdubs here and there, such effects are used sparingly in order avoid sugar coating.

We just did it for fun,” concludes Robyn. But we ended up with the fourth Junipers album!”


Joe and Robyn. Shed music.


The Solid and the Hollow album review on Jittery White Guy Music..

We received a lovely album review for our 2026 album The Solid and the Hollow on the Jittery White Guy Music blog : Been spending the past ...