Yellowcard
Better Days


5.0
classic

Review

by Sowing STAFF
October 10th, 2025 | 93 replies


Release Date: 10/10/2025 | Tracklist

Review Summary: Time goes so fast

Take a moment, if you will, and try to recall Yellowcard’s prime. They had their first number one single blasting through radio station speakers everywhere, they were selling out some of their largest venues ever, and were collaborating with like-minded pop-punk legends in a way that only seemed to enhance their ever-growing status within the scene. Looking back, it seems like an entirely different era in the world of music, doesn’t it? Wrong. Welcome to 2025! That’s right – Yellowcard are actually, somehow, bigger than they ever were. Tickets to their Ocean Avenue 20th reunion tour sold like hotcakes. The lead single and title track for Better Days spent nearly a month as the band’s first number one single (a feat that not even “Ocean Avenue” or “Way Away” achieved). Travis Barker joined the band in the studio and performed drums for all ten tracks, then produced the album as well. Nostalgia can be a tricky thing, because it toys with our perceptions. For as much as we tend to look to the past through rose-tinted glasses, sometimes the best moments we will ever experience are happening now, right in front of us. Enter Better Days.

Yellowcard’s eleventh LP and official comeback album after nearly a decade away could end up being their most commercially successful release yet. It’s tremendously polished, concisely trimmed, and insanely infectious. It feels like classic Yellowcard in terms of its energy and emotive lyrics (with just a dash of self-titled blink-182), but it sounds entirely modern and fresh – as if it is ushering in an entirely new era because…well, it is. Everything is crisper and smoother than at any point in their prior discography – Ryan Mendez’s guitars are sharp and rousing, Sean Mackin’s violins ring out with total clarity and conveyed emotion, Ryan Key’s vocals are as hook-laden as his lyrics are incisive, and Travis Barker’s absolutely propulsive drumming allows the band to reach any tempo they want at any time. Barker’s pull can also be felt with the inclusion of Matt Skiba (Alkaline Trio, blink-182) on ‘Love Letters Lost’ and Avril Lavigne’s powerful chorus on ‘You Broke Me Too’. All in all, Better Days is a sleek, glistening, shining pop-punk record which rounds up Yellowcard’s core essence and makes it sound grander than ever.

The album kicks off with ‘Better Days’, a track that combines prominent electric guitar work with an explosive chorus capable of remaining stuck in your head for weeks: “It's not too late to change everything you wanna change…are you happy now?” It’s an empowering message paired with a thought-provoking question, all wrapped in a Southern Air-styled atmosphere – so it’s not surprising how much it resonated with new and old fans alike on its way to topping the charts. Key also delivers an unexpectedly high vocal inflection during the refrain (for reference, consider the stratospheric heights ‘Only One’ reached) thus lending even more urgency to the moment. ‘Better Days’ is easily one of the most well-rounded, expressive, and wholly representative songs that the band has ever crafted, making it a perfect lead-off for Yellowcard’s triumphant return to the scene. ‘Take What You Want’ is a straightforward but utterly catchy tune that will have you bobbing your head and tapping your toes within seconds of it beginning. Its perky tempo is belied by lyrics of pent-up frustration, painting a picture of someone who brings everything to the table in a relationship but gets nothing in return: “I give all I got, you still ask for more.” Despite the clear toxic imbalance, it’s implied in the final verse that the narrator loves this person enough to continue helping them, “And I'd still give you more.”

That bitterness continues into ‘Love Letters Lost’, which features guest vocals from Matt Skiba and bounces atop choppy, frenetic violin cuts vaguely reminiscent of Ocean Avenue’s ‘Life of a Salesman’. “You had an empty heart and I was an easy mark” Key sings, telling a tale of being used during a moment of vulnerability: “Love letters lost, and I don't ever wanna find them / 'Cause I'm better off, forgetting you're the one that signed them.” A similar account of heartache and loss can be found on ‘You Broke Me Too’, a power ballad which initially features Ryan Key and Avril Lavigne on separate vocal duties before the two intertwine for a gorgeous moment during the bridge. The track once again laments this idea of being in a vulnerable state and being taken advantage of: “You found me, I was broken / You let a little bit of hope in / But you broke me too.” Key almost sounds haunted by it, at one point penning, “You're not even here, but you still won't let me rest.” Despite its title, much of Better Days reflects on moments of pain.

‘City of Angels’ and ‘Skin Scraped’ both seemingly deal with Yellowcard itself. Those who know the band’s lore will recall that on 2006’s Lights and Sounds, Ryan Key wrote a somber ballad called ‘City of Devils’ that conveyed how he felt like an outsider who did not belong under the bright lights of Los Angeles. The song also spoke to broader themes of alienation, but it was clear that Ryan (and perhaps the band by extension) did not necessarily enjoy being launched into stardom and thrust under the Hollywood spotlight at such a young age. By contrast, ‘City of Angels’ is something of a love letter to the town, offering an apology born from wisdom, experience, and context. “City of angels, I need you again / I know that you made me, you know who I am / I came here to find out if I could become / All that I dreamed of when I was young”, Key sings atop sweeping violins and an electronic undercurrent reminiscent of the group’s Lift a Sail days, eventually adding: “Time goes so fast, gone in a flash / Thought I was numb, getting close to the end / You give me hope, I can feel it again.” A similar sentiment arises from ‘Skin Scraped’, which appears to be about Yellowcard’s breakup and subsequent reunion. Set to a barrage of masterful drumming from Barker and a punchy, addicting chorus, Key sings “I listen now to find a faint heartbeat / How did we survive the fall? How did we revive at all? / Everything is different now, so we gotta fight to stay out / Of prison cells we kept each other in.” The song could be interpreted in many ways of course, but the immediate implication seems to be that the band members now realize what they’ve been missing during these extended hiatuses/breakups – and have finally had enough: “I didn't know we could crash this hard / Wake up from the accident, knowing it's the last of it this time / After all the shit we've been through, I'm never letting go of you again.”

Perhaps the most compelling messages on Better Days are the ones that see the band looking to the future. ‘honestly i’ – which carries massive ‘The Sound of You and Me’ vibes with its urgent refrain and percussive title wave – touches on the fears associated with fatherhood while also explaining how instinctive it is to overcome all of that when you are placed in charge of another, much smaller, life: “Honestly, I was afraid of this life, and sharing the pieces of me I don't like / Then when I felt your heartbeat next to mine, I never felt so alive”. 'Bedroom Posters' is an anthemic ode to moving on, likening it to leaving your childhood home and taking down the posters you had plastered all over your bedroom wall. On an album brimming with uptempo instrumentation and huge melodic hooks, ‘Bedroom Posters’ may still be the most infectious tune on the entire album. Whether it’s the catchy “Tear down my bedroom posters / Don’t say those days are over” that comprise the standard refrain or the key change and heartfelt pleas of “Tear it all down when I’m gone” within the bridge, there’s so much to sink your ears into here that it practically begs to be spun on repeat.

The best song on the entire album is the penultimate ‘Barely Alive’, a track that is equally about moving on but is absolutely gut wrenching compared to the almost playful ‘Bedroom Posters’. “Maybe it's not my fault, maybe it's not yours / Maybe we're just not those people anymore” Key leads in the opening verse, which feels downtrodden and melancholic, almost like a Jimmy Eat World Futures moment: “Maybe I don't love you, maybe I'm just bored / Pretty sure we both miss the way it was before.” The song erupts with a burst of drums and a massive guitar riff right as the chorus hits, and with each new verse Key’s lyrics cut deeper: “Silence is deafening and sorry’s just a word.” The song's most powerful and heartbreaking moment comes on yet another incredible Yellowcard bridge, where Ryan sings with a sense of audible pain, “I built this house, but it's not home / I lost myself when I let you go / I'm too young to be this old / Terrified I'm gonna die alone.” The emotionally sweeping moment is further enhanced by a magnificent drum fill from Travis, followed by one of Sean’s most breathtaking violin cuts. It’s Yellowcard firing on all cylinders, and if the lyrical content and delivery isn’t enough to bring a tear to your eye, then hearing the band in their absolute element – singing and performing their hearts out like it’s 2003 again – ought to do it. I haven’t been moved by a Yellowcard song like this since ‘Fields and Fences’, and I’m still utterly in awe over the sheer emotional magnitude of the moment. It’s earth-shattering.

Better Days becomes more emotive as it progresses, and by its conclusion we’re staring Ryan’s current reality – and many of our own – in the face. ‘Big Blue Eyes’ is an ode to Ryan’s newborn son, written in the form of an old-school acoustic Yellowcard track. The love shines through every verse and every word, as the guitar strings are gracefully plucked and the violins swell up with a sense of rustic nostalgia. Key’s words will resonate with anyone who has had a child and experienced just how much it changes your life in a mere second:

The days feel slower, but the weeks fly by
You make me wish that I could just stop time
I'm letting go of everything I knew
Now nothing else matters, it's all for you

There's life before you, and there's life after
I heard the melody in your laughter
I finally know just what my mother meant
When she told me there's no love like this

If I could put these times inside a jar
Inside my heart, you'd be there, just smiling
Your big blue eyes align the stars inside my heart
I see my whole life in your big blue eyes


When I listen to ‘Big Blue Eyes’, it immediately transports me to a hospital room a few short years ago when a doctor handed me my newborn son, helpless and wrapped in a cloth, with nothing but…well, big blue eyes…staring up at me. It’s a vision forever engraved in my memory as the happiest and most terrifying moment of my entire life. My perception of Yellowcard's discography over the decades has been one of a continuing storyline paralleling the events in my own life. With the launching of Better Days – a Yellowcard record that was never supposed to happen – this feels less like a new chapter and more like a new book entirely. I'm not the heartbroken teen I was during Ocean Avenue, or the bright-eyed, newly in-love young adult that I was back when I reviewed Southern Air. Now, as a married man with young children, my life is no longer just my own. Everything I do is an effort to bring to life a new story, and within it a series of unique chapters. It feels like a cycle completing itself, and honestly, I can say I've never felt more alive.



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user ratings (65)
3.4
great


Comments:Add a Comment 
Sowing
Moderator
October 10th 2025


45515 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

10/10 isn't just a release date, ladies and gents

Hawks
Staff Reviewer
October 10th 2025


113201 Comments


Where is Shamus????

Zeiu
October 10th 2025


336 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0 | Sound Off

Was underwhelmed on the first listen but after relistening.. It's great and there's lots of Yellowcard packed in to this album. I wish there was one last banger of a song to finish off the album though, that would be peak Yellowcard. Hope this is a proper return and we get more albums!

Sowing
Moderator
October 10th 2025


45515 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

Album is actually incredible. When I heard Travis Barker would be producing it I had some skepticism because I felt like One More Time has some sound issues, but he knocked this one out of the park. It sounds so much better than anything he's been involved with lately -- very crisp, polished, and smooth without instruments getting into sound wars or vocals getting lost in the chaos. Everything sort of just pops here. And of course, the songwriting is amazing. Barely Alive is now one of my all-time favorite YC songs.



Silence is deafening and sorry's just a word

I built this house

But it's not home

I lost myself when I let you go

I'm too young to be this old




right in the gut, sheesh

Calc
Contributing Reviewer
October 10th 2025


17955 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

first song had some JEW vibes to me. good album though

Sowing
Moderator
October 10th 2025


45515 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

I could sorta see that, but if there's a Jimmy song to be found on here I definitely think it's Barely Alive. Especially in the verses...



Glad to hear you enjoyed the album!

Zeiu
October 10th 2025


336 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0 | Sound Off

My favourite songs: Honestly I, Bedroom Posters, Skin Scraped, Barely Alive. Bedroom Posters might be my favourite of it all? Might change in another 5mins as I listen more. The more I listen, the more I realize how much YELLOWCARD is in this. Its got it all. Its a tight short album but its all there.



Zeiu
October 10th 2025


336 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0 | Sound Off

I thought 10 songs was short for Yellowcard, didnt realize WYTTSY was also 10 songs... Loving this album

Sowing
Moderator
October 10th 2025


45515 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

Agreed completely. This album is very polished production-wise but 100% retains their core essence. Absolutely blissful. Almost reminds me of blink-182 (the album) if Yellowcard wrote it. I hear a lot of sonic similarities between songs like "Feeling This" and "I Miss You" and the songs here.



I've been listening to the album for a while now (thanks to a promo) and my song ratings would go something, roughly, like this (keeping in mind that every song is a vibe and could become my favorite on a certain day):



Better Days - 5/5

Take What You Want - 3.5/5

Love Letters Lost - 4/5

Honestly I - 5/5

You Broke Me Too - 4/5

Skin Scraped - 4/5

Bedroom Posters - 5/5

City of Angels - 4/5

Barely Alive - 5/5

Big Blue Eyes - 4/5

Futures
Contributing Reviewer
October 11th 2025


17073 Comments


i had a sowing 5 for a new yellowcard album at about -2000 on the board. the safe investment cashes!

3waycrash
October 11th 2025


267 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

Nice to get not only a new Yellowcard album but a Sowing Yellowcard review in 2025. Always appreciate reading your thoughts. They've greatly helped build my appreciation for the band over the years as my personal favorite band. Wasn't sure what to expect with this new one, but I've been enjoying my first few listens. Taking my time and just letting it soak in, but I'm sure it'll continue to grow on me more. Plus I'm fortunate to have a chance to see them live while I'm on vacation so that'll definitely bump things up more for me.

Rowan5215
Emeritus
October 11th 2025


48384 Comments


liked this more than I thought based on the singles but it's still a step down from the EP. Love Letters Lost is the clear highlight imo, absolute heater but unfortunately You Broke Me Too is very bad

Sowing
Moderator
October 11th 2025


45515 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

@Futures: It's definitely a safe bet. YC is one of my personal favorite bands. I just love the energy and emotion they always bring. Most of their albums are 4.5's or 5's in my book with maybe a 4 here or there. Whenever they release something, it always seems to be exactly what I want from them at that moment and this is no different.



@3waycrash: I'm glad my ramblings have helped someone 😂 Yellowcard is one of those bands that goes hand in hand with the memories you make surrounding their records. I'm not sure if their material is just super conducive to memory-making or if I've just been lucky, but so many of their albums resonate strongly with me because they've coincided with key moments in my life. Even something like a vacation can definitely envelop the essence of a record. I remember buying their self titled album on a long road trip with my wife the year after I got married, and I'll still never forget how Fields & Fences resonated while driving through the rural no man's land that is much of central PA. Now whenever I listen to Yellowcard, I'm transported to that memory. It may seem minor but there's just something about YC's music that makes its mark on whatever I'm doing at the time. I hope this does the same for you!



@Rowan: I feel like Childhood Eyes was an extension of their old aesthetic, and I loved it. Tons of Southern Air and Paper Walls vibes on that one. Better Days is definitely their attempt to turn the corner and establish a new energy and excitement worth building around, sort of an Ocean Avenue for this generation of pop-punkers. For old heads like me it's tough to recapture that original OA essence, but it must be working on a broad scale because (see my opening paragraphs), they're absolutely killing it commercially with this. I never thought they'd have a more successful single in 2025 than they did in 2003 lmao. The fact that it's happening gives me hope for mankind, though 😅

Rowan5215
Emeritus
October 11th 2025


48384 Comments


Childhood Eyes brought together so many of their sounds in such a satisfying way. Hiding in the Light is still a top 5 song they've made for me, why they didn't try and make a whole album like that bridge is beyond me

this is a fun quick listen but it feels so consciously simplistic and repetitive that I can't not compare it unfavourably to the EP. that goes down to the production too lol, A/B any song from the EP to this and the difference is not kind to Travis

Sowing
Moderator
October 11th 2025


45515 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

Hiding in the Light's bridge is so, so good. Yellowcard has always been amazing at bridges and that continues on this LP. What do you think about "Barely Alive", Row?

I can't completely deny the claim that some of these lyrics are simpler (for as crazy of hook as TWYW is, it's not exactly poetry), but I still maintain that the majority of these lyrics are excellent -- particularly the further into the album you trek. The last two songs are brilliant and super emotional.

In terms of the production I actually really disagree. I think this is their most polished and shining record. I agree with the take that Travis Barker's recent output as a producer has been shaky (especially One More Time), but this is an improvement in every single way. Everything is super crisp. I think it boils down to preference in terms of the band's old sound vs. new...Childhood Eyes was more breathable, but Better Days absolutely pops. They're clearly going for something of a mainstream revival here, so I completely get why they jumped at the opportunity to work with Barker (and benefit from his pull -- I can picture them bouncing ideas off each other in the studio, and he'd be like, "hey, I think Avril would sound great in this spot, let me text her" and the entire band just being wide eyed like "uh, okay, YES!" 😂).

Rowan5215
Emeritus
October 11th 2025


48384 Comments


Barely Alive is good, in fact I like the whole second half of this a lot especially City of Angels (only point on here it feels like they're experimenting even a bit lol). I just zone out a bit in the first half of this except for Love Letters Lost, the rest of those songs just feel so blatantly single-y

I'm really glad they're having a moment and hope the success of this means they're sticking around for a long time really. that said this sounds so artificial to my ears, like the vocal filter on Blue Eyes is so actively detrimental to the emotion on that song. honestly think One More Time sounds better than this but maybe I just prefer that album lol

Sowing
Moderator
October 11th 2025


45515 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

Ha ha, makes sense because you're probably more blink leaning while I'm more yc leaning (although it's clear we both enjoy both). I don't think the single-y descriptor is off-base at all because I think that was the aim here. Sounds like it's not your favorite YC ever but I'm glad you're enjoying it to an extent. I have no clue where this ranks in their catalog for me yet, I'm still too stunned that they sound this energetic this late in their careers, and that they're churning out (what appear to be) hits again. I feel this will likely settle somewhere beneath SA and OA for me (both sentimental classics), but exactly where remains to be seen.

tmagistrelli
October 11th 2025


881 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0 | Sound Off

As a long time YC fan I feel this lacks the depth other projects have had. And was a smidge disappointed after CE.



But this makes up for it in hooks and accessibility. This is insanely catchy. Still some depth to be found too. Hope this does well for them.



Good review as always Sowing.

Sowing
Moderator
October 11th 2025


45515 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

Thanks tmagistrelli! I agree with both of your points: that this doesn't have the depth of their best works, but also that it is insanely catchy. I definitely am able to get the same emotional response from Barely Alive as I am from their most moving pieces, though, so hopefully there's more of that to come on future projects. Overall, I am incredibly stoked. This is the most energetic, infectious, and fun they've probably been since Ocean Avenue and that's not an exaggeration (from a sonic perspective).

nash1311
October 11th 2025


10482 Comments


Good grief a 5 😂

This is not a 5 on album Art alone 🤣



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