Montreal shoegazers No Joy started off with sounds as doomy and inconsolable as their band name, spinning tales of detachment and everyday dread over lo-fi treatments, guitar strangulation, and reverb abuse. As dreamy and exciting as the band could be, some details were lost in the fuzz of their 2010 debut, Ghost Blonde. While the follow-up Wait to Pleasure is by no means less obscured by feedback and noisy textures, the songs have a sense of clarity and determination that separates them from the band’s earlier work. No Joy often get lumped into the ever-expanding vat of 2010′s shoegaze revivalists, and though the influence of pedal-hoppers like Ride, Lush, Jesus & Mary Chain, and the revered My Bloody Valentine are hard to deny