NCT Dream's 'We Boom' album review: More like a K-pop nightmare

Published: 
Listen to this article

The third mini-album from NCT subunit NCT Dream is by far their worst to date

Chris Gillett |
Published: 
Comment

Latest Articles

Troupe sets the stage for young Hongkongers to enjoy Cantonese opera

The Lens: Malaysian military university faces another shocking bullying scandal

Listen Up: Hello Kitty celebrates 50 years

?xml version="1.0" standalone="yes"?

We Boom is the third mini-album from NCT sub-unit NCT Dream, and it is by far their worst to date.

The opening trio of tracks Boom, Stronger and 119 are bare, with each mix dominated by group chant singalongs which don’t gel with the often muddy and repetitive synth-bass lines and minimal R’n’B beats.

Then we have the second half, where NCT Dream are very different from their previous tracks.

Bye My First introduces some slinky guitar playing to create an almost bluesy, K-pop hybrid with smooth falsetto tones to boot, quickly seguing to an easy-going radio-friendly funk pop chorus, vying for that mass appeal pop single.

Baekhyun’s City Lights album review: the EXO singer’s solo EP hits all the right notes

Best Friend is similarly upbeat with its synth-pop shimmer and glitchy beats, but it’s let down by the near-constant clashing of vocals, before Dream Run returns to the funk pop aesthetic. It even contains some impressive piano flourishes in the pre-chorus, alongside the snappy refrain, “Gimme gimme gimme baby/Shout like a heartbeat/All right, all night”. It’s catchier, but not amazing.

With this release, the NCT Dream project has ended up becoming more of a nightmare.

Sign up for the YP Teachers Newsletter
Get updates for teachers sent directly to your inbox
By registering, you agree to our T&C and Privacy Policy
Comment