
The song is an urgent one, kicking off with a wholly unexpected driving piano that confirms Liam Gallagher wasn't lying when he said some of Beady Eye's output would be influenced by Jery Lee Lewis. It's energetic for the most part, until a bridge section toward the end that I would liken to late-60s Elvis, female backing vocalists and all. One criticism aside from the lyrics is that the energy of the first verse isn't really sustained. Maybe it's the shock of the initial listen, but the exciting kick off isn't maintained as the song goes on. An enjoyable listen on the whole, different from Oasis and it will be interesting to see how the rest of the album holds up upon release.
Note: Strange opinion of the day must go to the NME who briefly refer to the obvious 50s rock 'n' roll influence on the song before going on to describe it as "krautrocky" (!) - I'm struggling to see the, say, Tago Mago homage here aside from possibly the prominent percussion, but to call any song with noticeable drumming "krautrocky" is taking the use of musical buzzwords way, way too far.