The Guardian (USA)

Yungblud review – pyrotechni­c pop-punk straddles tenderness and rock-star cliche

- Huw Baines

Surveying the sea of people at his first arena show, Yungblud considers what he’s lost. Pushing sweat-soaked hair from his face, the 25-year-old singer – real name Dominic Harrison – laments being further from his fans than he’s ever been. “I am Yungblud, you are Yungblud,” he says, jumping down to the outstretch­ed arms at the barrier.

His sorrow rings true – as the head of a self-styled band of outcasts called the Black Hearts Club, he has attempted to build a fan community based on respect and acceptance. But it could also embolden detractors who view his musical style (Busted-style pop-punk meets emo-rap) and persona as cynical fakery aimed at commercial success.

And, because nothing is ever easy, both sides of the divide might leave this room feeling vindicated: tonight there is love, sadness and togetherne­ss, but there is also off-the-rack rock star grandstand­ing, pyrotechni­cs and confetti. It’s when the two meet that

Yungblud makes most sense.

Emerging from behind a screen displaying his silhouette alongside devil horns and angel wings – subtlety is not a concern – Harrison tears into 21st Century Liability, the synths and sirens of its recorded version crushed beneath the wheels of a band channellin­g the belligeren­ce of nu-metal.

The initial momentum of the set is a revelation. Dressed in a striped long sleeve beneath an outsized work shirt, enormous black sunglasses in place, Harrison is a kinetic presence, resembling Liam Gallagher one moment and Bring Me the Horizon’s Oli Sykes the next. Songs from Yungblud’s recent self-titled LP dominate the first part of the set, meaning that he plays a decent wedge of his best material up front. The Funeral, all Billy Idol sneer and new wave pomp, ignites a raucous shoutalong, with Tissues’ dancing melody faring similarly well.

Sandwiched between them is Parents, which again highlights the way Harrison has updated his sound. This is not a great song – it’s lyrically ropey and runs on forced singsong snottiness – but here it is undeniable: a stomping blast of distortion and disaffecti­on. Equally, Mars (dedicated to Brianna Ghey with the message “trans lives fucking matter”) swells into a cathartic anthem, leaving its glib Bowie tribute origins behind.

Still, three albums into his career, Harrison’s catalogue has a flabby middle populated by songs that undermine the anarchy of his image by being too trite or too dull. Played back to back, I Cry 2, Sweet Heroine and Kill Somebody slow the charge to a crawl, with the latter proving to be the one moment where his band’s extra rock heft produces only a grungy dirge.

At one point Harrison decamps to a secondary stage that’s decked out like a grotty bathroom. He sits on the toilet smoking a fag and reading a book, its words playing out as a voiceover and big screen video package. It’s almost a test of nerve: will the crowd stay with me through this? They don’t waver for a second. Yungblud hasn’t shed all his issues – but he’s found where he belongs.

• Yungblud tours the UK and Europe through February and March.

 ?? ?? Big issues … Yungblud performs at Cardiff Internatio­nal Arena. Photograph: Mike Lewis/ Redferns
Big issues … Yungblud performs at Cardiff Internatio­nal Arena. Photograph: Mike Lewis/ Redferns
 ?? ‘I am Yungblud, you are Yungblud.’ Photograph: Mike Lewis/Redferns ??
‘I am Yungblud, you are Yungblud.’ Photograph: Mike Lewis/Redferns

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