Bingo! by La Sécurité
73
ChoruScore
7 reviews
Established consensus
Jun 12, 2026
Release Date
Mothland
Label
Established consensus Mostly positive consensus

La Sécurité's Bingo! lands as a bruising, playful art-punk record that trades in urgency, murkiness and mischievous charm. Critics point to a band equally invested in physical percussion and cheeky melodic detail, and the consensus suggests Bingo! largely succeeds at turning anarchic energy into danceable hooks. With a

Reviews
7 reviews
Last Updated
Jun 15, 2026
Confidence
90%
Scale
0-100 critics
Primary Praise

Ketchup stands out as the emphatic, memorable closer that physically 'kicks us out' of the record.

Primary Criticism

Shared criticism is still limited across the current review sample.

Who It Fits

Best for listeners looking for art-punk reinvention and murkiness and disgust, starting with Power Snoozer and Deny.

Standout Tracks
Power Snoozer Deny Princesse

Full consensus notes

La Sécurité's Bingo! lands as a bruising, playful art-punk record that trades in urgency, murkiness and mischievous charm. Critics point to a band equally invested in physical percussion and cheeky melodic detail, and the consensus suggests Bingo! largely succeeds at turning anarchic energy into danceable hooks. With a 72.71/100 consensus score across 7 professional reviews, the record earns praise for its ambition, sonic diversity and bilingual flair while inviting some reservations about its occasional excesses.

Reviewers consistently flag standout tracks when answering what the best songs on Bingo! are: “Power Snoozer”, “Princesse” and “Snack City” recur as highlights, while “Deny” and “Chill Pill” get nods for snapping the album back into focus. Critics note the album's high-energy percussion, dance-punk momentum and art-punk reinvention, with English/French language switching adding texture rather than distance. Several reviews celebrate ornate recklessness and egg-punk DIY spirit, describing moments that feel punishing and intoxicating in equal measure.

At the same time, some reviewers temper praise with observations about pacing: the second half eases up in places, and the record's ambition can feel at odds with its playfulness. Still, across seven professional reviews the critical consensus favors Bingo! as a rewarding, sometimes wild listen - equal parts physical and cerebral, designed for Brighton shows, record-shop pileups and anyone curious whether art-punk can be both disciplined and gleefully disorderly. Read on for full reviews that unpack why critics agree this collection is worth hearing.

Critics' Top Tracks

The standout songs that made critics take notice

1

Power Snoozer

2 mentions

"Power Snoozer” is where it all converges. Recorded live off the floor and produced by bandmates"
Spectrum Culture
2

Deny

1 mention

"Deny” escalates the catchiness to critical levels, four-to-the-floor rhythms colliding with polyrhythmic bass"
Spectrum Culture
3

Princesse

2 mentions

"On “Princesse,” the French lyrics deepen it, lending the track a cool, coiled quality"
Spectrum Culture
La Sécurité's Bingo! dredges Guerilla Toss and Liars in a sewer for six months and calls it a day
T
The Line of Best Fit
about "Bingo"
Read full review
3 mentions
82% sentiment

Track Ratings

How critics rated each track, relative to this album (0-100). Only tracks that made critics feel something are rated.

View:
1

Snack City

2 mentions
50
02:55
2

Deny

1 mention
100
03:02
3

Detour

0 mentions
03:31
4

Power Snoozer

2 mentions
100
03:10
5

Princesse

2 mentions
80
03:44
6

Bingo

3 mentions
28
03:29
7

Chill Pill

1 mention
40
03:27
8

Trixie

2 mentions
40
02:33
9

Nah Nah

2 mentions
10
02:07
10

Ketchup

3 mentions
35
02:42

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What Critics Are Saying

Deep insights from 7 critics who reviewed this album

Critic's Take

In a voice that delights in filth and force, La Sécurité take Bingo! and turn it into a bruising, ornate art-punk statement where songs like “Ketchup” and “Bingo” feel engineered to shove you forward. The record is obsessed with momentum and percussion, each tune a grenade in a paintcan that rarely lets the drums sit still. There is genuine relish in the album's murkiness and disgust, which makes these best tracks on Bingo! feel both punishing and intoxicating. This is music that primes the moshpit and then politely kicks you out when dawn approaches, and I found I quite enjoy being treated like that.

Key Points

  • Ketchup stands out as the emphatic, memorable closer that physically 'kicks us out' of the record.
  • Bingo! excels through relentless percussion, murky synths, and a relish for grimy, ornate art-punk textures.

Themes

art-punk reinvention murkiness and disgust high-energy percussion ornate recklessness

Critic's Take

La Sécurité return with Bingo!, a goofy, pulsating record where the best tracks - “Princesse” and “Trixie” - showcase the band’s knack for danceable polyrhythms and vivid French-inflected melodies. The reviewer revels in how “Princesse” opens with a thick bassline and weird guitar slides that create an incredible sonic landscape, and how “Trixie” ranks among the suggested listens for its immediacy. Overall, Bingo! feels like a collection of yummy treats that heals your inner child while keeping the dancefloor gently off-kilter.

Key Points

  • Princesse is best for its thick bassline, weird guitar slides and French-inflected sonic landscape.
  • The album's core strengths are playful lyricism, danceable off-kilter polyrhythms, and intimate, humorous energy.

Themes

playful nostalgia danceable polyrhythms French-language lyricism intimacy

Critic's Take

Brighton shows and record-shop pileups are where La Sécurité make their point: Bingo! is built for motion and mischief. The best songs on Bingo! - “Snack City”, “Deny” and “Power Snoozer” - marry tight bass hooks and cheeky synths with just enough chaos to keep you dancing. Vocals flip between English and French for texture, and on “Princesse” and “Trixie” that bilingual confidence sharpens the grooves rather than dulling them. Even when the second half eases up, tracks like “Chill Pill” and “Nah Nah” snap things back to life, so recommending the best tracks on Bingo! means pointing to its relentless physicality and sly humor.

Key Points

  • “Deny” and “Snack City” are the best songs, combining irresistible hooks with physical urgency.
  • The album’s core strengths are its dance-punk energy, bilingual vocals, and playful production that feels both spontaneous and precise.

Themes

dance-punk energy language switching (English/French) physical urgency vs. discipline playful irreverence

Critic's Take

La Sécurité return with Bingo!, an album that proves the best tracks are where playfulness and ambition collide. The reviewer's pick, “Power Snoozer”, stands out as a compact standout that channels the record's art-punk energy, while the closer “Ketchup” is praised for its space-age synths and wailing vocal effects. Other moments, like the raucous immediacy evoked across the LP, show why listeners searching for the best songs on Bingo! will find both catchy riffs and experimental flourishes. The record is celebrated as fun, adventurous, and one of the year's most exciting rock releases.

Key Points

  • The best song, “Power Snoozer”, is named the standout and encapsulates the album's art-punk punch.
  • Bingo! balances ambitious, diverse production with playful, DIY egg-punk energy, making it exciting and fun.

Themes

egg-punk art-punk DIY spirit ambition vs fun sonic diversity
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