Todd Kilby — the singular mind behind the Banquet Darling moniker — is not, it must be said, a man who has lived a quiet life. Former circus acrobat. World traveller. Director. Musician writing songs on buses somewhere between Paris and Hong Kong. You get the sense that 'Dynamite Daddy' is the accumulated energy of all those restless miles finally compressed into four minutes of gloriously unhinged dance-punk, a genre that suits Kilby the way a sequined tailcoat suits a ringmaster: perfectly, obviously, and with tremendous commitment to the bit.
The track rides a four-to-the-floor pulse that owes debts to the DFA Records school of thought — that sacred lineage running from LCD Soundsystem through to the darker corners of post-punk's dancefloor obsessions. But Kilby isn't content merely to pastiche. Where lesser artists would simply strap a disco beat to a fuzz guitar and call it a day, 'Dynamite Daddy' layers its pleasures with genuine compositional cunning. The groove is relentless, yes, but it breathes. It has hips. It knows when to lean back and when to lunge forward.
Lyrically, the song operates with the kind of gleeful irreverence that recalls the great British tradition of pop art provocation — think Marc Bolan filtered through a grimoire, or the Pet Shop Boys after a particularly raucous evening in Aleister Crowley's library. The occult trappings are worn lightly enough not to tip into po-faced mysticism, yet with enough conviction to feel genuinely transgressive. This is not Halloween-costume darkness; this is the real thing dressed up in a glitter suit. The debauchery Kilby celebrates is earned, theatrical, and shot through with a wit that keeps the whole enterprise from collapsing into self-parody.
Kilby's circus background haunts the track in productive ways. There is a performer's discipline beneath the apparent chaos, a sense of precise calibration disguised as wild abandon. The dynamics — when the track surges, when it restrains itself — feel controlled by someone who knows how to read an audience, how to build tension across a big top before the trapeze artist finally lets go.
The debut album *Dreamlove Obscura* apparently earned Banquet Darling a cult following, and cult followings are, frankly, the only followings worth having. The mainstream is a wide, shallow, lukewarm bath. 'Dynamite Daddy' is something considerably more interesting — an invitation to a party held in a deconsecrated church at two in the morning, where everyone present has made an active, considered choice to be exactly there and nowhere else.
British music criticism has long had a weakness for eccentrics who mean it — for artists who choose excess not as laziness but as philosophy. Kilby belongs to this tradition. 'Dynamite Daddy' is bombastic by design, irreverent by conviction, and danceable by something approaching divine obligation.
Play it loud. Play it twice. Then perhaps consult a priest.
