Romero: Honey 7"
Power Pop has always been an island, a demilitarised zone where folks can lay down their arms, and join hands around the hook; a chimera of positivity and nervous energy created to provide some type of solace in a humourless and cold world.
Melbourneâs Romero wholeheartedly encapsulate this with their first outing âHoneyâ, a double A-side that takes its cues from the heavy hearted heavyweights of 70âs-80âs Punk and Power Pop, all the while flipping the script just enough to make it sound like 2020. Guitars shimmer and give off a brassy shine beneath bass lines that drive the hooks, while the drumming lays the bedrock (and roll) for show stealing vocals which really conjure up that old soul frenzy like not many others. Itâs simply unreal how well Romero carry themselves this early in the piece.
At this point itâs pretty pointless mentioning who else they sound like; why waste time trainspotting when you can be raging in your room, tearing it up with a big dumb grin plastered across your face? Shouting along to the chorus until youâre hoarse because it hits that one bone in your tired, apathetic body that can still feel the amount of joy required to remove you, if only for a second, from a world thatâs trying to hold you back.
ââHoneyââ is a record for the freaks and geeks alike. Hell, itâs for anybody that needs to be picked up and reminded thatâs itâs not all completely terrible.
Our take: This single is the debut release from this new band out of Melbourne, Australia, and it has ânext big thingâ written all over it. The two bands Romero reminds me of most are Sheer Mag and Royal Headache. Just like when I checked out those bands, the first time I listened to this single I couldnât tell if I liked it or hated it. On the second listen, though, I had to surrender and acknowledge that I love this. âHoneyâ is a monster track with huge guitar hooks building to even bigger vocal hooks. It has a soulful garage vibe that is, again, very similar to Royal Headache, but with added heft to the production and playing. The b-side, âNeapolitan,â is also great. The way the lead guitar snakes around the chorusâs vocal melody reminds me of the first Strokes album, which is a very good thing. If this band can put out an album anywhere near this good, they will be inescapable. And I will love it.
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Romero: Honey 7"
Romero: Honey 7"
Power Pop has always been an island, a demilitarised zone where folks can lay down their arms, and join hands around the hook; a chimera of positivity and nervous energy created to provide some type of solace in a humourless and cold world.
Melbourneâs Romero wholeheartedly encapsulate this with their first outing âHoneyâ, a double A-side that takes its cues from the heavy hearted heavyweights of 70âs-80âs Punk and Power Pop, all the while flipping the script just enough to make it sound like 2020. Guitars shimmer and give off a brassy shine beneath bass lines that drive the hooks, while the drumming lays the bedrock (and roll) for show stealing vocals which really conjure up that old soul frenzy like not many others. Itâs simply unreal how well Romero carry themselves this early in the piece.
At this point itâs pretty pointless mentioning who else they sound like; why waste time trainspotting when you can be raging in your room, tearing it up with a big dumb grin plastered across your face? Shouting along to the chorus until youâre hoarse because it hits that one bone in your tired, apathetic body that can still feel the amount of joy required to remove you, if only for a second, from a world thatâs trying to hold you back.
ââHoneyââ is a record for the freaks and geeks alike. Hell, itâs for anybody that needs to be picked up and reminded thatâs itâs not all completely terrible.
Our take: This single is the debut release from this new band out of Melbourne, Australia, and it has ânext big thingâ written all over it. The two bands Romero reminds me of most are Sheer Mag and Royal Headache. Just like when I checked out those bands, the first time I listened to this single I couldnât tell if I liked it or hated it. On the second listen, though, I had to surrender and acknowledge that I love this. âHoneyâ is a monster track with huge guitar hooks building to even bigger vocal hooks. It has a soulful garage vibe that is, again, very similar to Royal Headache, but with added heft to the production and playing. The b-side, âNeapolitan,â is also great. The way the lead guitar snakes around the chorusâs vocal melody reminds me of the first Strokes album, which is a very good thing. If this band can put out an album anywhere near this good, they will be inescapable. And I will love it.
Product Information
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Shipping & Returns
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Description
Power Pop has always been an island, a demilitarised zone where folks can lay down their arms, and join hands around the hook; a chimera of positivity and nervous energy created to provide some type of solace in a humourless and cold world.
Melbourneâs Romero wholeheartedly encapsulate this with their first outing âHoneyâ, a double A-side that takes its cues from the heavy hearted heavyweights of 70âs-80âs Punk and Power Pop, all the while flipping the script just enough to make it sound like 2020. Guitars shimmer and give off a brassy shine beneath bass lines that drive the hooks, while the drumming lays the bedrock (and roll) for show stealing vocals which really conjure up that old soul frenzy like not many others. Itâs simply unreal how well Romero carry themselves this early in the piece.
At this point itâs pretty pointless mentioning who else they sound like; why waste time trainspotting when you can be raging in your room, tearing it up with a big dumb grin plastered across your face? Shouting along to the chorus until youâre hoarse because it hits that one bone in your tired, apathetic body that can still feel the amount of joy required to remove you, if only for a second, from a world thatâs trying to hold you back.
ââHoneyââ is a record for the freaks and geeks alike. Hell, itâs for anybody that needs to be picked up and reminded thatâs itâs not all completely terrible.
Our take: This single is the debut release from this new band out of Melbourne, Australia, and it has ânext big thingâ written all over it. The two bands Romero reminds me of most are Sheer Mag and Royal Headache. Just like when I checked out those bands, the first time I listened to this single I couldnât tell if I liked it or hated it. On the second listen, though, I had to surrender and acknowledge that I love this. âHoneyâ is a monster track with huge guitar hooks building to even bigger vocal hooks. It has a soulful garage vibe that is, again, very similar to Royal Headache, but with added heft to the production and playing. The b-side, âNeapolitan,â is also great. The way the lead guitar snakes around the chorusâs vocal melody reminds me of the first Strokes album, which is a very good thing. If this band can put out an album anywhere near this good, they will be inescapable. And I will love it.











