Nashville ‘egg punk’ band Snooper whip up a mix of egg-plosive rock tunes.
This is my
first egg-sposure to the punk microgenre known as ‘egg punk’ (I promise
to ‘crack’ no egg puns from here on in). Also known as ‘Devo-core’, the style of music consists
of lo-fi fast-paced deadpan punk tunes that as far as I can tell have nothing to
with eggs. Four-piece band Snooper (stylized as Snõõper) are a fairly recent
addition to the egg punk scene, having only formed in 2020, but have already built quite a following. Their
debut album Super Snõõper received rave reviews, and their live shows
have garnered a lot of attention for their use of large crowd-surfing papier-mâché
puppets (the band has apparently created a whole ‘snooperverse’ of papier-mâché characters).
Lead single
and title track ‘Worldwide’ was my introduction to the band and remains one of
the most fun rock songs I’ve heard in 2025. It’s an intense track with
ultra-fuzzy bass and a disco-flavoured chorus (there are more dance music influences on this album than their debut). The lyrics seem to be about the
chaos of being on tour – the feeling of being jostled from one place to another
– which is perfectly encapsulated by the chaotic instrumentation.
I was hoping
the rest of the tracks on Worldwide would be just as wild, and I’m happy
to report that they are. There’s the hi-octane ‘Company Car’ which features the
loopy lines ‘I’ve got the keys to a company car/ come with me and we’ll go
really far/ let’s take it to Planet Fitness/ Just so everyone can witness’
accompanied by showy shredding and wah-wah revving. There’s the fierce ‘Guard Dog’, which is an
anthem about overcoming anxiety with dog bark sound effects into the mix. There’s
‘Pom Pom’, which is a song about being your own cheerleader, delivered in the
band’s signature cheerleader vocal style and driven along by rattling drum machines. And
there’s also a punked-out cover of The Beatles’ ‘Come Together’ (because, why
not?).
A few of the cuts are a bit more straightforward like ‘Star 6 9’ and ‘Blockhead’, but even
in these cases the breakneck pace and unique production keeps them thrilling. I
particularly like how blown-out the bass is on this album, and yet how it doesn’t
smother everything else – you can still clearly make out every lyric, every
guitar note and every drum beat. Only at the end of closing track ‘Subdivision’
does the band allow things to fall apart into cacophony, at which point it
feels necessary to provide a climax.
★★★★☆
TRACK TASTER:

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