Stylistically far from the boozy, punk-addled,
Clash-inspired pub rock of their meal ticket band's
Petty,
Seger, and
Springsteen-adoring fifth studio album
Tomorrow's Hits, the first outing from
the Men's
Nick Chiericozzi and
Mark Perro under the
Dream Police sobriquet retains the kinetic, full-frontal sonic assault that's come to define the shifty, Brooklyn-based unit, but replaces the bar band setup (guitar, bass, and drums) with driving, Krautrock-inspired electronics, resulting in something that sounds akin to darkwave with all of the lights on.
Hypnotized has more in common with the band's
Cheap Trick-inspired moniker than one might suspect, as bubbling beneath its gritty, decidedly lo-fi/new wave revival exterior, which has a lot in common with
Tubeway Army, super-early
Cure, and even earlier
Sisters of Mercy, there lies a foundation of pure, fist-pumping, confectionary pop (think
Psychocandy-era
Jesus and Mary Chain with a touch of
Spacemen 3 psych rock and
Joy Division bleakness tossed in for good measure). The title cut, which also serves as the first single and opening track, wastes little time getting to the heart of the matter, offering up a sinewy and propulsive road rager of an electropop anthem that's as sonically vital as it is emotionally nihilistic -- imagine the
Modern Lovers' "Roadrunner" being run through an old solid-state amplifier with the distortion cranked all the way up. "My Mama's Dead" follows a similar trajectory, but things shift stylistically soon after, devolving into icy blasts of shimmery goth pop ("Iris"), anthemic space rock ("All We Are"), and even
Cramps-inspired, juke joint tomfoolery ("John"), resulting in a fascinating if not entirely comprehensive set of oddball, largely homespun-sounding sonic emissions that feel a little half-baked, but still awfully tasty. ~ James Christopher Monger