Supercharged by The Offspring

The Offspring Supercharged

65
ChoruScore
3 reviews
Oct 11, 2024
Release Date
Concord Records
Label

The Offspring's Supercharged arrives as a sunlit, festival-ready shot of punk that leans into the band's strengths: short, anthemic hooks and playful aggression. Across three professional reviews the record earned a 64.67/100 consensus score, with critics largely agreeing that the album's payoff rests on its immediate, crowd-pleasing moments rather than bold reinvention.

Critics consistently point to “Light It Up” as the standout, called a speedy, sub-three-minute banger by Kerrang! and praised by Classic Rock and Sputnikmusic for recapturing the band's traditional raucous energy. Other frequently noted tracks include “Hanging By A Thread”, “The Fall Guy” and the participation-ready “Come To Brazil”, all summoned as highlights that translate especially well to arenas and festival singalongs. Reviewers praise the collection's enduring punk energy, nostalgic pop-punk touchstones and cheeky humour, crediting The Offspring with crafting moments of genuine uplift and mosh-ready momentum.

At the same time professional reviews underline uneven songwriting and occasional cringeworthy detours: Sputnikmusic flags roughly a third of the album as weak or awkward, while Kerrang! and Classic Rock welcome the revivalist spark but note few surprises. The critical consensus suggests Supercharged will satisfy fans seeking energetic, singalong punk and festival anthems, even if it stops short of a full-scale return to form. For listeners weighing whether Supercharged is worth a spin, the best songs on the record provide the clearest reason to press play.

Critics' Top Tracks

The standout songs that made critics take notice

1

Light It Up

3 mentions

"old-school thrasher Light It Up"
Classic Rock Magazine
2

Hanging By A Thread

1 mention

"Hanging by a Thread captures their full-throttle punk sound"
Sputnikmusic
3

The Fall Guy

1 mention

"The Fall Guy captures their full-throttle punk sound"
Sputnikmusic
old-school thrasher Light It Up
C
Classic Rock Magazine
about "Light It Up"
Read full review
3 mentions
86% 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

Looking Out For #1

2 mentions
03:16
2

Light It Up

3 mentions
100
02:52
3

The Fall Guy

1 mention
80
02:34
4

Make It All Right

2 mentions
03:34
5

Ok, But This Is The Last Time

1 mention
5
03:23
6

Truth In Fiction

1 mention
75
02:00
7

Come To Brazil

2 mentions
55
04:19
8

Get Some

1 mention
23
02:57
9

Hanging By A Thread

1 mention
89
03:26
10

You Can't Get There From Here

1 mention
03:54

What Critics Are Saying

Deep insights from 4 critics who reviewed this album

Critic's Take

In her jaunty, slightly incredulous voice Emma Johnston insists that The Offspring on Supercharged still do what they do best - full-throttle, sunlit punk with singalong hooks. She highlights “Light It Up” as an old-school thrasher that proves they can be pissed off and raring for a ruck, and flags “Come To Brazil” as a festival-ready, participation-demanding anthem. The review reads like a warm shrug - no new tricks, but plenty of life in these old dogs yet - which frames the best tracks as crowd-pleasing highlights rather than experimental leaps. Overall, the best songs on Supercharged are presented as the record’s most immediately gratifying moments: stomping rage, cheeky pop callbacks, and chants made for arenas and bars alike.

Key Points

  • The best song is a high-energy crowd-pleaser because it captures the band’s enduring punk bite and singalong potency.
  • The album’s core strengths are relentless positive energy, festival-ready anthems, and nostalgic, polished punk songwriting.

Themes

enduring punk energy festival-ready anthems nostalgic pop-punk playful aggression
60

Critic's Take

Nick Ruskell writes with an affable scepticism that turns into surprised approval: on The Offspring's Supercharged the best tracks are immediate and bite-sized, especially “Light It Up” which he calls a "speedy, sub-three-minute banger" and the opener “Looking Out For #1” which he compares unfavourably to past hits but uses to set contrast. He keeps a conversational, slightly sardonic tone, noting the band's old cartoony SoCal punk and humour while praising when they actually sound refreshed and energised. The narrative balances critique with clear nods to revival - this is an album where short, punchy songs win out.

Key Points

  • The best song is "Light It Up" because it's concise, fast, and shows the band energised and refreshed.
  • The album's core strengths are short, punchy punk tracks that reconnect with the band's SoCal humour while remaining uneven.

Themes

return to form humour and silliness energetic punk revival uneven songwriting
Sputnikmusic logo

Sputnikmusic

Unknown
Oct 10, 2024
56

Critic's Take

As a fan of The Offspring, the reviewer writes that Supercharged delivers its best moments in “Hanging by a Thread”, “Light It Up” and “The Fall Guy”, songs which recapture the band’s full-throttle punk energy and strong hooks. They praise the record for being a marked improvement over Let the Bad Times Roll while noting its unevenness, where attempts at experimentation - notably “Come To Brazil” and “Make It All Right” - fall flat and feel cringeworthy. The tone is measured but candid, celebrating nostalgia-packed highlights while warning that a third of the album consists of either poorly written tracks or awkward stylistic detours.

Key Points

  • “Hanging by a Thread” is best because it most effectively recaptures the band’s mid‑nineties full‑throttle punk sound with strong hooks.
  • The album’s core strength is returning to energetic, hooky punk songwriting while improved production prevents it from repeating prior disasters.