Call Me Junior - Razorlight

After a 10-year hiatus, the quartet proved they could still capture the "unique sound" that only the original four members could make.

Lyrically, "Call Me Junior" serves as a defiant manifesto against maturity. The recurring refrain acts as the central hook. The song explores themes of nostalgia and the messy dynamics of old relationships, with lines about "breaking the locks on your car" and using "two blasts on the headlight" as a secret sign. Call Me Junior Razorlight

Produced by Borrell himself, the single features a "scrappy," punky energy with chugging guitar rhythms and a pacey beat, intentionally avoiding the more polished "pop behemoth" sound of their mid-2000s contemporaries. Lyrical Themes: The Refusal to Grow Up After a 10-year hiatus, the quartet proved they

The track was recorded straight to tape and mixed in a single afternoon in a London studio. The song explores themes of nostalgia and the