In 2021, it felt like everyone wanted to make pop-punk, and a result Travis Barker never had a free day in his diary. Having cut his teeth during the emergence of emo rap in the mid-2010s, Lil Lotus decided to migrate genres for his debut album ERRØR BØY (no prizes for guessing which member of blink-182 he brought aboard for two of its songs) but despite his polished, angsty approach he found himself swept away with the tide thanks to a lack of original ideas.
The follow-up hasn’t totally learned from those mistakes. There’s nothing outrageously offensive about nosebleeder but there’s little to distinguish the Dallas artist’s take on the genre from anybody else’s. It doesn’t offer much to latch onto either, with not enough properly memorable hooks and too much AutoTune. On top of that, the album struggles to justify its longer-than-average tracklist with its identikit (albeit decently written) tales of toxic relationships and addiction and a lack of variety in its sound, and chances are, not much would be lost if its 14 tracks were cut to, say, 10.