Stray Kids is officially back with a brand new single titled LALALALA, which is the lead single off their 8th mini-album, ROCK-STAR. This releases follows from an already busy 2023 for the group, which has consisted of a studio-length album (headlined by the single S-Class, which has been nominated for multiple awards in the 2023 KPOPREVIEWED Awards), 2 Japanese comebacks (The Sound and Social Path – both of which has been nominated for an award in the 2023 KPOPREVIEWED Awards, as well), the continuation of their MANIAC world tour and their 5-STAR Dome Tour (just to name a few key event/releases).
For me, the standout moment in LALALALA is its chorus. It is definitely a continuation of the dynamic and bombastic energy that the group have continuously presented to the audience in their choruses over multiple songs. LALALALA‘s beat translates into foot-stomping energy (which goes hand-in-hand with the performance), while the chorus lines were short, snappy and hooky. The shouty delivery does mean the chorus forgo melodies, but I am not too troubled by it. But nonetheless, it is a sequence that I would gladly go back to. Similarly, the outro sequence, featuring Seungmin and Lee Know’s vocals and Bangchan’s falsetto, ends LALALALA extremely well. On the other hand, the rest of LALALALA just doesn’t feel memorable enough – this comment only comes after a lot of listens to LALALALA under the belt. Yes, the rest of LALALALA (i.e., the verses and bridge) has everything you expect when it comes to a Stray Kids title track, such as powerful rapping and the energy from these sequences never lets up. And I wish to emphasise that the verses and bridge are not bad in any way. But there just wasn’t anything new in these sequences, which made LALALALA feel plain by Stray Kids’ standards and leaves me disappointed with LALALALA. Great centrepiece, but LALALALA could have been better had the rest of the song done more.
Once again, the cinematography seen in the music video is amazing. Particularly, the drone shots at the end of the video were epic and showcases the scale that is LALALALA‘s music video when everyone from all corners of the video are performing LALALALA with the group. From what I can gather from Stray Kids’ reaction to the music video, it begins with the marching band kids (a recurring set of costumes in Stray Kids’ music video) we see throughout the video feeling four types of emotions on stage – anger, happiness, sadness and pleasure, represented by the Hanja characters (and probably all the different settings we see in the video). But as the video progresses, 3 emotions (anger, happiness and sadness) disappear, leaving only pleasure (‘rak’ as pronounced in Korean) behind, highlighting that the kids ultimately felt pleasure whilst performing on stage. Stray Kids’ themselves also theorised that the eight kids on stage are younger versions of themselves (by drawing parallels to their height), which then provides the meaning that Stray Kids feels pleasure whilst performing on stage.
Stray Kids really know how to put on a performance, and I feel that LALALALA‘s performance is testament to that. I really liked the vibration parts at the start the choreography and the foot-stomping in the chorus really channels the energy of LALALALA super well.
Song – 8/10
Music Video – 9/10
Performance – 9/10
Overall Rating – 8.5/10
7 thoughts on “[Review] LALALALA – Stray Kids”