Driven – Christopher Thelen

Reviewed by Christopher Thelen
Published on Feb 8, 2002

Solarized is a group who seem to refuse categorization. On the
surface, they may seem to be the latest in the now-overflowing
genre of stoner rock bands. After all, this is a band whose family
tree has at least one branch connected to Monster Magnet.

Yet Solarized is anything but what you’d expect. Think what
would happen if Rob Zombie fronted The Damned – or even if Glenn
Danzig fronted Monster Magnet. That kind of – but not quite
accurately – describes what
Driven, the latest release from this New Jersey-based
quartet sounds like. It’s raw and it’s enjoyable – but it does get
a little predictable around the midway point.

Guitarist/vocalist James Hogan has absolutely perfected the rock
and roll “sneer vocal,” injecting just the right amount of attitude
into his delivery. Listen to a track like “Dig The Ride,” the first
full-length track (following a 16-second “Intro”) that wakes the
listener up from any possible indifference they may have had. The
two-guitar attack of Hogan and Dave Toptlenski, backed by the power
rhythm section of bassist Mike Fiore and drummer Regina Satana,
lets you know that Solarized are by no means what you might have
expected them to be.

Many of the tracks on
Driven have an air of heaviness to them, all without
removing themselves from their boogie-rock roots. Tracks like
“Chrome Shop,” “Conspiracy” and “Meanspirit” all are ample proof of
this. And the full-throttle cover of The Damned’s “Stab Your Back”
should be more than enough to drive people into the used record
stores to (re)discover one of the founding fathers of British punk
rock.

Yet
Driven follows a simple formula – and at times it feels like
that formula grows a little threadbare. “Box Full Of Dirt” and
“Angel” both are tracks which came at a time when the full power of
Solarized should have been in effect, yet these tracks, while not
bad by any sense of the word, just don’t have the same energy and
snap that others on this disc do. By the mid-point of the disc, I
found it far too easy to drift off into my own world of thoughts –
not a good thing when we’re talking about a CD that clocks in at
just under 40 minutes.

Still, one can’t help but hold out bucketfuls of hope for
Solarized. After all, the momentum swings back in their favor by
the time the last track, “World Without End,” kicks in, and
Driven overall is a nice way to spend part of an afternoon.
If they tighten up their songwriting and delivery just a little
more, Solarized could well be on the verge of becoming a serious
force to deal with in the commercial market – and that’s something
I’m looking forward to.

Rating: B-

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