Video Premiere

Romance and Sorrow Collide with Jason Priest’s “White Anglo-Saxon Protestants”

Who is Jason Priest and where has he gone? is the question on all our minds.

The new album Jason Priest is Missing, out today, is the victorious return of Antoni Maiovvi (known as the co-founder of Giallo Disco Records and a slew of other projects) under his alias, Jason Priest. With two EPs from years past—King-Kill/33° and Nightmare Boy—Maiovvi merges several genres into his first full-length album on Midnight Mannequin Records.

Post-punk, synthpop, and electro flavors collide in Missing, an upbeat album with just a hint of melancholy. The story of alter ego, Jason Priest, is a fascinating one: “Priest, the British punk rocker who heads to New York City in 1982 on the heels of a brand new record deal, [spends] the better part of the decade strung out on amphetamines and drowning in alcohol. Now, Jason is back in London with renewed energy from both the change of scenery and, more importantly, a newfound sobriety.”

This storyline leads us to Priest’s new music video. Part The Cure’s “Friday I’m in Love,” part New Order’s Get Ready, the song “White Anglo-Saxon Protestants” is a fuzzy, monochromatic dream. Priest dances, guarded with his guitar, as grainy images flicker behind him, reflective of the seedy nights spent at in the dirges of New York City. Are your moral standards high? he asks, perhaps as a question for himself. The post-punk guitars blend in with sharp disco drums to create a romantic, sorrowful atmosphere that’s inherently danceable.

Jason Priest is Missing is that feel-good album for the post-pandemic summer we’re all craving. It’s “electronic power-pop for the Haçienda crowd, complete with ‘I’m-rushing-my-tits-off’ joy and comedown melancholy.” And if that’s not reason enough to search out Jason Priest, nothing will be. Vinyl is available in two versions: the “Speed and Leather Edition” and the “Clean and Sober Edition”—pick your poison.

Buy it on Bandcamp. Find it here on all streaming platforms.

Follow Midnight Mannequin on Facebook and Instagram.

Andi Harriman

Andi Harriman is the author of "Some Wear Leather, Some Wear Lace: The Worldwide Compendium of Postpunk and Goth in the 1980s." She resides in Brooklyn, New York where she writes, DJs and lectures on all things dark and gloomy.

Recent Posts

Michigan Alt-Rock Artist Brother Wolf Wanders the Woods in the Video for “Wait”

Who are you on the other side Are you kinder Are you patient Are you…

3 days ago

Los Angeles Dark Electro Project Frontal Boundary Debuts New Single “Shutting Down”

In a world where social media drives constant comparison, the relentless pursuit of an elusive…

3 days ago

Berlin’s XTR Human Smashes the Status Quo in the Video for his Hard Hitting EBM Track “Neid”

In an era where rapid technological advances and shifting social dynamics often render traditional systems…

3 days ago

Trit95 Announces Self-Titled Compilation LP of Songs from 2017 to 2021 + Interview

The Santee, California artist, Trit95, doesn't need the bells and whistles. With an entire catalog…

3 days ago

Listen to the Gauzy and Baroque Gothic Rock of The Palace of Tears’ New Album “Veiled Screen, Woven Dream”

Pieces of you Remnants of a life lived You were real You were not imagined…

3 days ago

The Sunset Upon the Waves — Danish Synthpop Act Mount Villa Debuts Video for “Glitter”

Mount Villa, led by composer Paulo Andruszkow, blends '80s synthwave, vibrant pop, and cinematic jazz.…

4 days ago