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11 Reviews
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
we are polysics, we are not polysics,
By "cheshirreccat" (San Leandro, CA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Hey! Bob! My Friend! (Audio CD)
being a devo fan from way back, seeing the picture of 3 tokyo mutants dressed up in yellow radiation suites and wearing 3-d sunglasses shocked an appalled me. out of pure indignation and disgust i bought their record "hey bob, my friend" and was neither shock nor appalled, i was delighted. my goodness i thought to myself, these 3 beautiful mutants of the east have so wonderfully built on the devo foundation while remaining unique and interesting. once again i am listening non stop, day and night to the sound of things falling apart. do the polysics care about food, genetics, the future, you bet...and more. the polysics provide musical calisthenics to toughen up a world gone soft.
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
HEART ATTACKS!,
By
This review is from: Hey! Bob! My Friend! (Audio CD)
BOOM! EXPLODE! HEART ATTACK HEART ATTACK HEART ATTACK!!! BANG! ZAP! BRAIN BUZZ! EXPLODE! AHHHH!! LASERS!And there you have it. The best intro I could think of for the Polysics review. I really don't know where to start. So I might as well explain what they look like onstage. First off, they're Japanese. Onstage they all wear radioactivity suits and reflective wrap-around sunglasses. One guy's got a guitar, there's a girl behind the keyboard and another guy playing drums. They'd probably start up their set without warning and then go and play about an hour of non-stop heart attack-inducing music before fainting on the stage. The Polysics play something maybe best described as surf-math-rock. Imagine early Devo with a thirst for blood. This sounds like they want someone to get hurt. It's got the energy and chord changes of a surf record, but with the rabid and exacting melodies from the guitar and the new wave synths flying past your head at 1000 miles per hour, there's something more scientific going on. They're making rock music dorky again. The pictures of them in the liner notes show them all over the place in their trademark get-ups looking like Godzilla just arrived and they're the scientists here to help stop him, but really they're just here to rock you silly! "Sunnymaster" is a minute-long intro that starts with any other drum machine until it explodes, literally, and and video game synths beep and buzz for a while and guitars bring it to a raucous conclusion. The whole record sounds like a video game, come to think of it. "Buggie Technica" has a opening guitar crunch banging repeatedly to open the song, but this happens over and over again with a vocoded voice yelling something over it and you don't even think the song will get start and suddenly, BAM! The CD blows up and threatens to take your boom box with it! The song would completely fall apart if it weren't for the surf rock melodies desperately trying to keep this thing on the CD. I'm convinced that if MTV were to get a hold of this, you'd start seeing Polysics music showing up in every extreme sports program you'd see. Then starts the super-charged enigmatically titled "Plus Chicker." This features the first singing on the disc from guitarist Hiroyuki Hayashi. It's unintelligible with all the noise, and I'm guessing it's Japanese anyway. "Hot Stuff" just continues the flow. Despite the fact that this record is actually a compilation of songs from a few Japanese releases by the Polysics, it flows really well. I was also surprised that a familiar melody popped up on track 8 and I quickly realized they were covering a song by another favorite Japanese band, Pizzicato Five's "Good" from The Sound of Music. Polysic Kayo does her best to recreate the cute cooing of Maki Nomiya, while the music of course differs greatly from P5's as this is much more likely to give you an epileptic fit. This goes on for an even briefer than it sounds 33 minutes. Just a warning: Don't you ever try driving to this record, as a wreck is more than sure to happen.
5.0 out of 5 stars
CRAZYCRAZY!,
By Jubie (Missoula) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Hey! Bob! My Friend! (Audio CD)
My favorite Polysics album to date. It is insanity in it's most nerdiest. The later albums seem crowded by the presence of bass to me. It's audio caffeine.
4.0 out of 5 stars
Are we not men?,
By Amazonian (San Francisco<P>San Francisco, CA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Hey! Bob! My Friend! (Audio CD)
This Japanese import takes their cue from Devo, and sustains a punkish energy full of synth warbles and squeaks, as well as smartly-styled pop that always stays on the upbeat. While some of these songs will appear in later releases, the marerial is both inventive and energetic. In fact, it's probably unfair to lump this in the "Devo" category; they've long since made strides to make their sound more frenetic and exciting.
4.0 out of 5 stars
Japanese for "*&^%$#@!!!",
By
This review is from: Hey! Bob! My Friend! (Audio CD)
Polysics are an odd Japanese hybrid of new wave/synth pop, punk, electro and all-out noise warfare. Supposedly they're heavily influenced by Devo but it's kind of hard to tell by this release, unless the lyrics take a similar absurdist slant. Again, hard to tell since the lyrics are indecipherable--they could be in English, Japanese, Swahili or Esperanto for all I know. Of course, like most Japanese bands that make it Stateside, the lyrics are the last things one would notice. On "Hey! Bob! My Friend!" they come off like a totally bonkers bio-mechanical experiment using the recombinant DNA of Melt Banana, Brainiac and classic Atari video games. If you understood any of that then give yourself some hipster brownie points. Or maybe you're just a total nerd. Guess which one I am? Oh, hell, just buy the CD already.
4.0 out of 5 stars
Funky Fresh,
By
This review is from: Hey! Bob! My Friend! (Audio CD)
This album is a refreshment from the Japanese Beverage Co. No, all of this does not make sense but, that is the good of it. You have little noises and big ones that just have you scratching and bobbing your head. No one says that this is dancable but, you can still go crazy with it. I find that this would be a great album to drive to a big city and just cruise through the freeways. If you like this checkout the Blood Brothers and/or the Ex Girls.
Along with all of that it is adventous and entertaining. I would have to say this is Japanese Noise at the the top but not the greatest.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Crazy and nice,
By
This review is from: Hey! Bob! My Friend! (Audio CD)
Some friends of mine got lucky enough to see Polysics recently at one of their concerts and while there got this cd. I listened to it and got addicted enough to get a copy for myself! The songs on this CD are utterly insane, but that's what makes them so cool! I listen to this cd every morning to wake myself up while driving. It's fast and wild!
3.0 out of 5 stars
Thrashing guitars and electronic bleeps,
By Wickerlove "Wickerlove" (Canada) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Hey! Bob! My Friend! (Audio CD)
Leave it upto the Japanese to make sense of a combination that shouldn't go together. 'Hey Bob My Friend' basically sounds like what would happen if grebo bands like Age Of Chance/Pop Will Eat Itself (or a more percussive Jesus And Mary Chain) had sex with R2D2. Abrasive thrashing guitars meets futuristic robotic bleeps, like guitar chaos meeting the analog noises of Stereolab on speed. The vocals shift from Nina Hagen chants to the playful call and response of Shonen Knife. Holding all of this craziness together is a thumping Joy Division-like backbeat, ensuring that none of this goes wildly astray. At first the sound seems unnerving and quirky, but after a few listens, you begin to recognize the rock intensity and rhythmic sensibility of The Polysics. Frenzied, futuristic, and noisy...but it still speaks the universal language of rock and roll.
5.0 out of 5 stars
you're going to [wet] yourself,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Hey! Bob! My Friend! (Audio CD)
this is a very awsome cd. if you consider yourself an music person this is the cd you need to own to proove it. it's still one of the most bizare cd's in my collection. and i love just as much as the day i bought it. rock the hell one
5.0 out of 5 stars
oh yeah!,
By jo (mesa, az, usa) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Hey! Bob! My Friend! (Audio CD)
totally addictive cd.....you think usual japanese music is weird..... polysics is almost scary the first time you hear them, but the second time....addicted. crazy experimental stuff you wouldnt hear in the western hemisphere! |
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Hey! Bob! My Friend! by Polysics (Audio CD - 2001)
$12.66
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