Song Review:: BoA: Crazier- Crazier

  • Release Date: 2025 August 4

  • Album tracklist: Crazier, Healing Generation, It Takes Two, Don't Mind Me, How Could, What She Wants, Up And Down, Love Like This, Like I Like, Hit You Up, Clockwise

  • Album runtime: 17 minutes

 One of the Queens of K-Pop is back! Queen BoA! The legend you are! My girl needs no introduction. Eleven songs on her eleventh album with an average of three minutes per song. The title track is a little short, but the last one is nearly four minutes long. Happy as a clam, I am. I have the single she released in May on my list of songs to cover, but even though I'm so behind, it is on the list.

Grungy guitar and a firm drumline make up the majority of the instrumentals for this song, but there's enough play to it that the rock feels fun. It's intense and driving, but the little trills and echoes of the melody with the guitar give the song so much character that it's hard to ignore. Like, I know that this is short, but I'm genuinely so in love with this song that I'm struggling to focus on this section on its own because it just works so seamlessly with her voice. Full on fangirling going on over here. Also, there are some sections that sound a lot like My Pace by Stray Kids. So I'm also fully into that.

She's got such a fantastic grit to her voice in places in this song. I mean, she doesn't quite have the same qualities as Joan Jett or Pat Benatar where they fully and completely lean into the rock grit, but she feels like she could belong to the same genre of women. Which is a huge compliment because right before I started listening to K-Pop, I heard Joan Jett in person and almost cried because of how much I love her. I also love the amount of sass the song has, as well as the repeated refrain does a lot to get some really good power into the song. But also, this is Queen BoA. She's been around so long that if her voice wasn't stunning, it wouldn't make sense.

She's gorgeous, and I will accept no arguments on that end. Also, she debuted at thirteen in 2000, making her a first gen goddess. In this music video, which confirmed how much English I thought the song had, she seems to be a sort of apocalyptic harbinger of some sort. She's just here to have a good time. It's not her fault everything is setting on fire or exploding. 




Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Who is this Random Person Reviewing K-Pop and Why Does Her Voice Matter in the Cacophonous Discord that is the Internet?

Battle of the B-Sides:: BoA: Start Over

GREATEST HITS:: NU'EST W (NU'EST): HELP ME

Music Show Wins:: Week of 01/15 - 01/21

Battle of the B-Sides:: Fin.K.L: To My Boyfriend

Greatest Hits:: SHINee: Everybody

Song Review:: Taemin (SHINee): Eternal- Sexy in the Air

Greatest Hits:: MAMAMOO: Starry Night

Music Show Wins:: Week of 04/23 - 04/29

Battle of the B-Sides: Jin (BTS): Heart on the Window