Broke Royals - 'Campr'

8/10

There’s a quiet defiance running through 'Campr', the latest full-length from Broke Royals. This is an album that understands how much strength lives in composure, and it builds an entire soundscape around that idea.

From the first notes of 'Better Off', you sense the tone has been set. Written in the heat of a politically charged era and now sounding eerily prophetic, the track explores how restraint is so often misread as fragility, while the loudest voice in the room tends to claim the spotlight. Yet Broke Royals never raise their own volume to compete. Instead, they let a grounded rhythm section and layered guitar textures do the heavy lifting, creating momentum without bombast.

Across the record, the band sidestep the usual peak-and-drop theatrics of modern indie-pop. The grooves feel intentional, patient, almost meditative. Hooks arrive naturally rather than exploding into view, while melodies crest without overselling themselves. There’s a sense that the band trusts both the songs and the listener as it plays.

The title-track, driven by shimmering twelve-string lines, carries a feeling of open air and forward motion, while 'Still' drifts into hazier terrain, its textures blooming slowly like dusk settling over a city skyline. 'The Weather' lands with quiet resolve, its emotional clarity cutting deeper than any grand gesture could.

Lyrically, 'Campr' is preoccupied with subtle awakenings that surface gradually, when you realise you’ve been stretching too far for others or muting parts of yourself to keep the peace. Themes of distance, friendship, self-direction, and drawing lines are handled with nuance. They feel observational, lived-in, and reflective.

What makes 'Campr' so compelling is its refusal to chase spectacle. In a landscape obsessed with virality and instant gratification, Broke Royals lean into longevity. They remind us that groove can be powerful without flash, that emotional directness doesn’t require theatrics, and that sometimes the boldest move is simply holding your ground.

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