With their spiky hair, electric guitars, and dewy, lip-ringed smiles, Australia's 
5 Seconds of Summer are often dubbed the 
One Direction of punk-pop. It's an admittedly facile if apt comparison reinforced by the fact that 
5SOS (
Five Sauce, as their fans call them) toured with 
One Direction in 2013. However, even if 
5SOS are a punk boy band, then it's a minor distinction, and one that's arguably been around since 
Green Day first incepted it with 1994's 
Dookie. It's also a brilliant marketing tool brought to apotheosis at the dawn of the millennium by 
blink-182's multi-platinum album 
Enema of the State. Sixteen years after 
blink-182's breakthrough, 
5SOS have taken stock of all the small things with their sophomore album, 2015's 
Sounds Good Feels Good, a slick, professional production that finds them embracing their punky boy band image with unabashed glee. Recorded in Los Angeles with producer 
John Feldmann (
the Used, 
All Time Low, 
Plain White T's), who previously helmed most of the group's debut album, 
Sounds Good Feels Good also finds the group collaborating with a handful of like-minded if slightly older artists, including 
Good Charlotte's 
Benji and 
Joel Madden, 
All Time Low's 
Alex Gaskarth, and others. Generally speaking, this big brother/little brother vibe works, and cuts like the "She's Kinda Hot" and "Permanent Vacation" are upbeat, singalong-ready anthems that bring to mind a mix of influences from 
Green Day to 
Sugar Ray. The rest of 
Sounds Good Feels Good reveals a more earnest inclination, with 
5SOS delving into some dancey, 
1975-esque post-punk on "Waste the Night," going for acoustic, orchestral flourishes on the ballad "Invisible," and shading their chunky '90s 
Radiohead guitars with crooning emo-angst on "Airplanes." Ultimately, for most of the group's fan base, 
Sounds Good Feels Good will live up to the promise of its title. ~ Matt Collar