SINGLE REVIEW: Saticöy - Want It All
Saticöy’s 'Want It All' explodes out the gate and doesn’t let the energy dip for a single heartbeat. Clocking in at a lean 2 minutes 12 seconds, it’s a masterclass in economy: fast, unrelenting, and brimming with intent. The band hit hard from the first gut-punching beat, weaving in infectious riffs that sparkle with sunshine-soaked SoCal pop punk warmth, all delivered with a crisp polish that sharpens every hook and every crash.
The beauty here is how much personality they pack into such a short runtime. The vocals bring a distinctive twang and bite, giving the song its character, while the instruments handle the melodic weight. Guitars shimmer with bright hooks, the bassline keeps everything pulsing forward, and the drums switch between tight precision and bursts of rampant chaos that inject a frenetic edge. It’s the kind of song that feels destined to spark a pit, yet it carries a lightness and drive that leans into fun rather than fury.
What’s striking is how 'Want It All' manages to feel both tightly controlled and totally reckless at once. The riffs are hooky and infectious, each chorus landing with addictive ease, and the whole track carries a sense of effervescent momentum that belies its brevity. Beneath the adrenaline, there’s a strong pop sensibility — a knack for building momentum and layering riffs in ways that make it stick long after the final scream fades.
Saticöy prove here that brevity can be a strength. By refusing to waste a moment, they’ve bottled adolescent angst, soaring instrumentation, and pounding chaos into one perfectly formed pop punk belter. It’s fast, driven, and unapologetically loud, but also melodic, hooky, and effervescent. 'Want It All' isn’t just a rush — it’s the kind of short, sharp thrill that demands another immediate spin.