Indie Dock Music Blog

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BREADCRUMBS – So Sticky
There's something gloriously unhinged about a band that can distill the essence of human connection into one minute and thirty-three seconds of pure, unadulterated bliss, then cap it off with what can only be described as a "Kung-Fu ending." BREADCRUMBS, the north-eastern post-punk quartet who've been quietly building a reputation as ones to watch, have achieved exactly that with "So Sticky" – a shot of concentrated euphoria that feels like stumbling upon a secret.

The opening salvo hits with the kind of shameless enthusiasm that recalls the Buzzcocks at their most gleeful, yet there's something distinctly contemporary about the band's approach to unity and love as subject matter. In an era where cynicism feels like the default setting, BREADCRUMBS dare to be earnest without being earnest – a tightrope walk that lesser bands would tumble from spectacularly.


Andy Neill's vocal carries echoes of Jack Douglas, but filtered through a distinctly English sensibility that manages to sound both knowing and naive. It's the voice of someone who's seen enough of the world to understand its absurdities but hasn't lost the capacity for wonder. The backing from Dave Burton's guitar work, Bill Waugh's bass, and Geoff Suggett's drums creates a sonic tapestry that's both immediate and layered – familiar enough to grab you instantly, complex enough to reward repeated listening.


What's most striking about "So Sticky" is its refusal to overstay its welcome. In our age of bloated streaming-service albums and indulgent sonic experiments, there's something punk rock about a band that can say what they need to say and get out before you've had time to check your phone. It's the musical equivalent of a perfectly timed joke – any longer and it would lose its impact, any shorter and it wouldn't have room to breathe.


The Kung-Fu ending isn't a gimmick; it's a statement of intent. BREADCRUMBS understand that music should surprise, should make you grin despite yourself, should remind you that art can be both serious and silly without contradicting itself. It's middle-aged cool without the desperate edge that usually accompanies such claims – these are musicians who've found their voice and aren't afraid to use it.


"So Sticky" positions BREADCRUMBS perfectly as the appetizer for their forthcoming album "The Breadcrumbs." If this single is any indication, the band has crafted something that balances the existential weight of modern life with the simple pleasure of a perfectly crafted pop song. In just over ninety seconds, they've managed to capture what many bands spend entire albums reaching for – that sweet spot where chaos becomes beauty, where discord resolves into harmony, where a Kung-Fu ending makes perfect sense.