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The Sounding Board

Snõõper remains wonderfully weird on Worldwide

A weekly column where New Music Tuesdays live on. Conversation is encouraged in the comments.

Worldwide

Every Tuesday, the Sounding Board is a space for a short-ish review of a recent-ish release and conversations about new-to-you music. I’ll get things started with a write-up about a newer, likely under-heard album, and invite you to share your music musings in the comments.

If Snõõper’s gleefully madcap music comes as a surprise, that’s really on you. Everything about the Nashville art-punks — their tilde-sporting band name; their cutely chaotic appearance; the lo-fi bombast of snooperonline.com; and especially the papier-mâché-headed mascots that orbit their shows, inspire merch and appear in promotional video games — communicates the oddball energy that powers Snõõper’s goofy yet propulsive sound. 


Their songs tend to be short bursts of fast-twitch weirdness with some serious heft. That’s thanks to a double-guitar attack courtesy of Connor Cummins and Conner Sullivan and routinely beefy basslines from Happy Haugen. The music’s muscular hyperactivity contrasts with Blair Tramel’s vocals, which are often delivered with droll detachment.1 They’re bops that reward attentive listening, but don’t demand intense scrutiny. It’s a glitchy detonation of the candy store right at the intersection of Minutemen and Le Tigre, and it’s gotten some slight polish for Snõõper’s second full-length album, Worldwide.2

There isn’t a huger difference in terms of fidelity or quality between the band’s extremely fun 2023 debut and Worldwide, but they linked up with the omnipresent John Congleton for album No. 2, and that makes a difference.3 While Congleton’s touch seems relatively light, it provides Snõõper with a little extra oomph that accentuates the qualities that had already earned them fans. There’s all sorts of wild hissing feedback and surging electric noise on this album that adds texture and a sense of build-up to songs that often clock in at under two minutes. The instruments sound great, too. The fret-climbing fun of “Company Car” is a searing standout, and the sharp report Brad Barteau’s drumming is noticeably crisper throughout the album, too. Rather than sanding down rough edges, it’s a subtle choice that pushes Snõõper’s irrepressible hyper-activity a smidge further into the red.

Paradoxically, the qualities that make Snõõper and Worldwide uniquely off-kilter and fun might be most evident on the album’s ripping cover of “Come Together” by the Beatles. In Snõõper ‘s hands, the Lennon-penned classic is truncated by nearly three minutes and progresses in herky-jerky spasms of fury. Listeners who don’t know the song’s nonsense lyrics probably won’t clock the track as a cover until it reaches its undisguisable chorus. However, in hindsight, the stripped-down, sharpened version of an iconic riff seems obvious — even when it’s played at berserker speed.

It’s a delightfully unexpected approach to an oft-covered song, and it shares more than a little of its stilted angularity with Devo’s version of the Rolling Stone’s “Satisfaction.” For arty weirdoes who combine punk rock with visual artistry that’s equally arresting and confounding, there couldn’t be better company

  1. Tramel is also a visual artist, which makes a lot of sense in light of the rad aesthetics that permeate everything this band does. ↩︎
  2. Like their debut, Super Snõõper, Snõõper’s new album was released by Third Man Records. ↩︎
  3. Congleton’s produced some of this year’s best rock albums. I’d put Cutthroat by shame at the top of his 2025 production credits with Worldwide and Who Will Look After the Dogs? by Pup a half-step behind it. He also produced solid albums by the Murder Capital and Mogwai this year. It is mind-boggling. ↩︎