ThePunkSite.com | Bankrupt - Razor Wires and Neon Lights
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| CD:
Razor Wires and Neon Lights |
Artist:
Bankrupt |
| Label: PiaRRecords |
Rating:
3/5 |
| Best Song:Parallel worlds |
Reviewer:
Bobby Gorman |
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Last year, Hungary’s Bankrupt came out of nowhere and thoroughly knocked
my socks off with their five-song EP, Rocket to Riot City. They wasted no time
in getting back into the studio and are now back with another EP, the six-song
Razor Wires and Neon Lights – an album that has been able to live up
to its predecessor’s shadow although I still can’t help but feel
that Razor Wires is missing a little something.
Riot City was a no-nonsense pop-punk album, pulling heavily from classics
like the Ramones but also recent additions to the pop-punk spectrum like Broadway
Calls or Teenage Bottlerocket. The trio continue that trend on their fifth
studio album as they once again pull heavily from the three-chord pop-punk
of the Ramones (particularly on Parallel Worlds) but they also have left some
of the 77 pop-punk elements behind a bit and replaced them with some more mid-nineties
skate-punk characteristics.
Through that, the album becomes a bit more technical and faster; with some
almost metal guitar riffs at times. The tracks then fall somewhere between
the spectrum of 1208 and Strung Out – which is far from being negative
but also comes as a bit of a surprise at times. The closing riff in Lonesome
Train seems a bit out of place with its near chugging guitar and the vocals
on the choruses of No Surrender and Wave of Bankruptcy sound almost like they’re
coming through a filter and are heavily influenced by Alex Flynn of 1208.
Still, for the most part, Bankrupt stays routed in the classic one-two punk
of pop-punk. Infectious choruses and bouncy melodies delivered at a fast paced
speed, Razor Wires and Neon Lights is most definitely a fun and memorable pop-punk
album – and one that I’ll pull out many times to listen to again.
I just think that Rocket to Riot City was a bit more fun.
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