Skrillex Book Club: Volume 4 - Bangarang (2011)
Posted: Mon Feb 09, 2026 11:59 am

Image by bepmp3
Time for the the fourth instalment in the "Skrillex Book Club".
ICYMI, we're taking a listening journey through the discography of the great Sonny Moore and sharing some of our thoughts along the way.
Last week, we looked at More Monsters and Sprites.
This week, the EP many of us have been waiting for...
Bangarang (2011)
Hell yeah dude. Fuck yeah dude. I almost always forget how good this one is until I revisit it. Once again, a whole heap of childhood nostalgia associated with this EP. My earliest memory with it was trying desperately to find clean versions of 'Kyoto' and 'Bangarang' as a kid because I was paranoid that my parents would get mad at me for listening to music with swears. I ended up trimming the end off of the latter myself and very poorly editing the cover art in MS Paint to get rid of the parental advisory sticker so no-one would be any the wiser.
So many classics on here. 'Right In' sets the energy from the get go. Punchy in all the right ways. Love the vocal chops. The title track is a staple of course. I like how you can tell Sirah's vocals were just recorded on a laptop, especially in the outro. Crazy ass video as has become par for the course by now. 'Breakn' a Sweat' is crazy if not for any other reason than getting The Doors on it. And it rips aside from that too! The "Making Of" video for that track is also a treat. I remember trying to make my own "music video" for this one with my friend Dante in like 5th grade. Needless to say, it didn't pan out. The riff on 'The Devil's Den' also rips. Listening to it this morning, I could almost imagine a more typical Myspace-era version of this track with that same riff. I have a vague recollection of listening to this song on a childhood car ride and feeling something that I can only describe as Christian Guilt for enjoying a song with the line "we all live in the devil's den" so much.
The only real weak track on here is 'Right On Time'. It's not awful, it could maybe work as like a DJ tool of some sort. But it's just kinda nothing burger overall. Cool sounds but feels like its constantly building up to something that never happens. But that doesn't matter because then we get 'Kyoto' and 'Summit' baybeeee. Ouuaaagghhhhh Summit is so goddamnn good.. Like a spiritual successor to With You Friends. A wonderful closer.
You really do start to see him come into his own here and refine his style even further. This is also where I think he hit the mainstream the hardest. Skrillex was now becoming somewhat of a pop culture figure. For better or worse, he was now associated with this "new" electronic sound that was supposedly taking the world by storm. This is when and where your weird uncle started asking you if you've "ever heard about this dup step thing". And you'd have to play a bit stupid to get you to leave him alone before his rant fully devolved into a self-felating "music was so much better when I was your age"-style rant. This is the sound that Top 40 producers had to struggle make heads or tails of and wound up chasing for the next 5 years or so (to varying degrees of success). This was the blueprint.
Now it's your turn!
What are your thoughts on this EP? Do you love it/hate it? Have you even heard it? (if not, go listen, the image is a link to it's RYM page)
Speak your mind!