Stewart Anderson took a break from releasing
Boyracer records after 1996's
In Full Colour, coming up with only a few scattered tracks and the
Boyfuckingracer compilation for the next eight years. In the meantime,
Anderson moved from the U.K. to Arizona, married Jen Turrell, and settled into a completely new incarnation of his long-running band.
Happenstance (self-recorded by
Anderson and Turrell with minimal exceptions) sounds a bit cleaner than
Boyracer's earlier examples of lo-fi distorto-pop, but the basic template is the same: short sharp shreds of pop-punk that mix the deliberate limitations of
Pink Flag-era
Wire to the unapologetic popcraft of prime
Green Day, tempered by
Anderson's occasional feints towards sugary bubblegum. In the old Sarah Records days,
Boyracer was too noisy and defiantly abrasive to ever be considered twee, but perhaps
Anderson has mellowed; some of these 23 short songs (two minutes and under in length), particularly the opening "Vinegar Evenings" and "Flinch at the Light" (a previously unrecorded song written by the long-absent former
Josef K frontman
Paul Haig!), are downright pretty even under the layers of guitar fuzz. Some years after most of his fans assumed he was out of the music business entirely,
Stewart Anderson showed up unexpectedly with the best album of his career.