7/10
Blueprint Tokyo’s 'Neon Circuits and the Mission of Hope' takes its cues from a nostalgic place, dances with it, drives through it, and then emerges reborn. The Oklahoma City outfit's first full-length is a gleaming, emotional expedition through sound that merges retro flavours with modern urgency to produce a record that feels like a midnight transmission from another dimension.
From the very first notes of 'Say Anything', it’s clear Blueprint Tokyo are looking to embark on a broader and more immersive aesthetic. The opener bristles with twitchy guitars and neon-lit synths, equal parts restless energy and introspective pulse. It flirts with tension before giving way to both 'Replicants' and 'Take My Breath', the latter a lush, sax-kissed slow burn that could’ve rolled straight off the end credits of an ’80s heartbreak movie.
There’s a cinematic thread running through the whole album, where each song like a scene in some moody sci-fi epic. 'Stranger Things' stands out as the emotional centrepiece, unfurling in waves of brooding instrumentation and widescreen synth textures. It’s the sound of looking back through cracked glass, where every shimmer hides a story and every beat holds its breath.
What’s most impressive is how seamlessly the band shape-shifts without ever losing grip on the album’s emotional through-line. Whether navigating shimmering dance rhythms or reflective soundscapes, each song feels intentional as part of a larger arc that’s both intimate and expansive. But rather than cherry-picking styles, 'Neon Circuits...' builds its own atmosphere of layered yet immediate textures.
With this release, Blueprint Tokyo have fulfilled their early promise to revive the more forgotten elements of the musical landscape. 'Neon Circuits and the Mission of Hope' is the sound of memory filtered through machinery set to motion. It’s a bold, beautiful record that leaves a lasting impact on the new music scene.