Song Reviews:: The Boyz: Unexpected- VVV
- Release date: 2025 March 17
- Album tracklist: Feel the Bass, VVV, Starry Night, Ain't Salty, Rose, Rock and Roll, Nothing, Miss Demeanor, Cross Over
- Album runtime: 31 minutes
Sangyeon has been added to my enlistment wall as I picked up a photocard of his specifically for this purpose. Congrats to The Boyz for their successful move over to One Hundred! It's been a few days since they dropped this, but from what I can tell, things seem to be going well. There's some big competition right now for those first place wins on the shows, but I wish fans and group good luck. I just swore in my head in about three languages seeing the run time on this song. Be still my soul. Do my eyes deceive me or is there only one song under three minutes long? One Hundred Label. This is an excellent sign.
Note: I didn't get this finished when I was going to and also, I was in a car accident (again, this time on my way home after work. Neither of them have been my fault. I am simply cursed apparently because that's two in a week).
This sounds like a 2PM song specifically from around Go Crazy era. The song goes hard with the synth and the sense of drama. It has moments of silence with the instrumental, allowing the vocals to roll uninhibited with the momentum of the song. This is such a a dance song and I've got some tentative hopes for the choreography, something that The Boyz always excel with this. I'm not familiar enough to know if this properly sounds like a The Boyz song, but it's a good representation of dance pop.
We've got some fun harmonizing in the song between falsettos and lower chest or mixed voices, and if you've read some of my other reviews, you'll know I absolutely love harmonizing. The more voices and different notes, the better. I even like octave harmonizing and will take that in the absence of other kinds of harmonization. I really like the amount of chest voice we get in this. It's a nice change of pace and makes the song feel quite grounded to allow the falsettos to soar without being untethered.
Not me just realizing what "VVV" stands for. I should have expected it though given the predilection for acronyms. The music video has quite a lot going on in the storyline department, which pleases me. It's definitely a victory or celebratory song, which fits the real-life narrative of the group, and is demonstrated by the various forms of triumph demonstrated throughout the song. The use of the fireworks at the end I particularly liked, as well as the looser, joy-filled goofing off that the members did in the outro. They seem like they're happy and enjoying themselves, which is a good sign to be seeing with their first comeback in their new company.
Comments
Post a Comment