[Review] Rocket Punch make solid “Bim Bam Bum” debut that could get lost in the crowd

When it comes to pop music, everyone’s got their biases. But, being a fan of an entire agency is a uniquely K-pop proposition. It’s akin to being a devotee of Western companies like Marvel or Apple — knowing that your taste so closely aligns with their output that you’re bound to support anything they create.

Such is the case with Woollim Entertainment and me. They gave me an ultimate bias group in Infinite, and a new-gen bias in Golden Child. Lovelyz remains one of my favorite K-pop girl groups, even if their sound isn’t something I usually go for. I can’t help rally behind Woollim even when they make dubious decisions (Where is that long-fabled Golden Child comeback, anyway?).

So, when it comes to the agency’s new girl group Rocket Punch, I’m arriving with nothing but anticipation. Whether it’s quirky synthpop for Lovelyz or boisterous pop rock for Golden Child, Woollim artists have a history of debuting with a signature identity. With this in mind, Rocket Punch’s “Bim Bam Bum” is a head-scratcher. Its tropical-meets-electronic sound is the most generically trendy debut Woollim has ever delivered. With half of the members already known to the public via ‘Produce 48,’ I wonder if the agency just didn’t feel that a fresh style was needed. That lack of musical ambition would certainly follow the post-‘Produce’ template!

Either way, “Bim Bam Bum” is solid if uninspiring. Its greatest asset is its unique structure, which incorporates secondary choruses as the song grows. Composed by the Iggy and Seo Youngbae team (best known for crafting a near-flawless seven-single run for GFRIEND), the track trades their hard-hitting synths for more amorphous production quirks. I do like the fairytale-like flutter that pops up every now and then in the background, but otherwise this is a sound palette we’ve heard too many times before, and fails to distinguish Rocket Punch from the crowd.

On first listen, I was afraid that the titular hook during the first chorus of “Bim Bam Bum” would be all the song had to offer. Thankfully, things grow interesting as a brisk second verse builds toward more fleshed-out melody. This trend continues during the song’s potent bridge, which ushers in a climactic chorus to finish things off. The problem is that the instrumental doesn’t answer this creative structure strongly enough. It builds in fits and starts, but is too indebted to its tropical base to paint outside the lines. I’ve come to expect a fuller sense of musicality when it comes to Woollim artists, so by this metric “Bim Bam Bum” is a bit of a disappointment.

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IATFB says: Yeah, basically. I like them so far as a group, but the song didn’t stand out at all.

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