
The Bingo Boys are up with a nitro-blast of a new single called “Cheap Gas.” Released December 4th, 2025, from the heart of Indianapolis, this track is a raw, unvarnished shot straight to the central nervous system. This is about feel, fury, and the frantic search for a decent price on premium unleaded.
At the wheel is the architect, lead shouter and six-string slinger Gus Matracia, the guy who penned this asphalt anthem. Riding shotgun with a chaotic dual-role attack is Michael Carter, manhandling both guitar and drums—evidence of this trio’s scrappy, do-it-all ethos. On low-end rumble that’ll rattle your fillings is Noah Mackey on bass. Together, they are the Bingo Boys, a fast, fun, and unapologetically punchy unit that’s been gaining steam globally, especially after their well-received EP “Stay Hydrated.” Major props to Matt Haddock on the mix and Grant Husselman on the master for keeping this beast dirty, loud, and alive.
So what’s “Cheap Gas” all about? It’s the soundtrack to that bleary-eyed, cross-state haul where the horizon blurs and your mind starts playing tricks. Matracia taps into a universal truth for the road-weary: the desperate, almost paranoid hunt to “save a few bucks on a full tank.” It’s not simply a song about fuel; it’s an anthem for monotony, for the gritty determination to just keep moving when everything—including your wallet—is running on fumes. The narrative is pure, relatable grind, packaged in a mosh-worthy frenzy.
The “Bingo Boys” are no secret anymore. They’ve already crashed the elite party, featured on the Emmy award-winning series “Music in Transit,” with “Cheap Gas” serving as the climactic final song of their set. And they’re not hitting the brakes. Mark your calendars for March 2026, when they’ll bring this live-wire act to the legendary West Virginia Punk Rock Flea Market. If the recorded track is this much of a riot, their live set is guaranteed to be a sweat-drenched, crowd-surfing explosion.
Bottom line: “Cheap Gas” is proof that punk rock’s heart still beats loudest in basements and dive bars, played by trios who value feel over flash. The “Bingo Boys” have made a track that’s cheap on price but massive on pure punk rock value.
