Hopeless Romantic is the fourth full-length studio album by American punk rock band the Bouncing Souls. It was released in 1999 on Epitaph. The album finds the band experimenting with tempos and genres, all while maintaining the energetic punk sound of their previous albums. Hopeless Romantic contains fan favorites like "Kid", "¡Olé!", and the ballad "Night on Earth."
Release
Hopeless Romantic was released in May 1999. The Bouncing Souls toured with H2O, Vision, and the Casualties on the east coast in November and December 1999.[5] Drummer Shal Khich left the band in January 2000.[6] Towards the end of the year, the band supported Green Day in Europe.[7]
"¡Olé!" (Armath, J. Deja, The Bouncing Souls) – 3:04
"Undeniable" – 2:37
"Wish Me Well (You Can Go to Hell)" – 2:56
"It's Not the Heat, It's the Humanity" – 2:14
"The Whole Thing" – 5:13
Trivia
The song "Kid" contains a reference to the 1980s movie "The Breakfast Club"
"¡Olé!" was the theme music for professional wrestler El Generico before he was signed to WWE. It was also used as an entrance theme for Former AEW, Current WWE wrestler, CM Punk in his indies days. The song was also used as a goal song for the New Jersey Devils in the 2006-07 season, which was the final season that they played at the Meadowlands Arena before moving to Prudential Center the following season. The song was also used for the Vancouver Canucks as a goal song in the 2002–03, 2005–06, and 2006–07 seasons.
Seminal Australian punk radio show Bullying The Jukebox takes its title from track 5 of the disc.
^Deming, Mark. "The Bouncing Souls - Biography". AllMusic. Retrieved September 10, 2023. The Bouncing Souls were in stronger form on 1999's Hopeless Romantic, which found the band exploring more personal lyrical themes while still delivering their energetic punk sound.