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You Come and Go Like a Pop Song

The Bicycle Thief

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Album Review

With a new band in tow, the Bicycle Thief, Bob Forrest makes his return to music after an eight-year hiatus. For the uninitiated, the now ex-junkie/alcoholic, tortured-soul musician is best known for his tenure with the rock group Thelonious Monster. Several years off and a new band have not prevented Forrest from offering up his signature brooding fare on You Come & Go Like a Pop Song, a garage band-sounding collection that showcases the singer/songwriter's usual themes: regret, pain, confusion, self-defeat, consumerism, materialism, and the general ills of society. The album is successful in the sense that it starkly paints pictures of life's dark sides and how we all have the capacity to delve into very pained inner recesses. It also is a choice musical body of work with its garage sound, catchy guitar riffs, and earthy nature; audiences may find it reminiscent of early R.E.M. music. That said, here's where, for listeners, a crossroad might enter the picture. You will either love or hate You Come & Go Like a Pop Song. Here's why: There's something potentially irksome about listening to a near-40-year-old guy singing, "I keep making the same mistakes again and again and again" and "bumming another cigarette." For some, Forrest will come across like a pathetic, whiny, overgrown child. Others may tout him as a prophet for the misguided, misinformed, and troubled. And, be advised, this album is relentless with its self-defeating themes. Of the disc's 13 cuts, "Rainin' (4am)," "Stoned," "Off Street Parking," "LA Country (Hometown Blues)," and "Hurt" are especially whiny and black. In a nutshell, this album is an hour-long diatribe by Forrest on how life is hard, people cruel, and mistakes impossible to avoid and recover from. If you have no tolerance for adult misfits who continually bang their heads against the wall and appear to be overwhelmed by the world, you may want to avoid this album. If you can stand all the whining, Bob Forrest and the Bicycle Thief are masters of solid garage rock music and, to that end, this album is a score.

Customer Reviews

Album Synopsis Unfair

The reviewer was obviously projecting his or her own distaste for this particular type of finely cultured, methodically developed song crafting for an assignment. Perhaps she or he might be happier reviewing the churned-out, pre-ordained stuff off of KEXP in Seattle, where everyone is different, and everyone is unique. This is a tight, smart album and though the theme is mostly about addiction, it isn't simply "whiny" or whatever smug term the unworldly reviewer deemed it. A mirror might be in order here: a life of "content providing" not working out the way you planned, in the music industry? Your friends tired of your couch surfing? Anyone who has dealt with the hurt of watching someone decline in their addiction, or stood on that precipice themselves and have successfully pulled back would understand what Mr Forrest is saying in this album. The reviewer might want to actually go out and live a life outside the used record store comparisons. And call his or her mother once in a while.

This is a goodie!

This album is awesome...and it gets better everytime I listen to it. I agree that it does have a somewhat raw and garage-band like sound. Musically and lyrically I feel it, and I think it is great. I definitely recommend it.

In short, best album I own

This is a great claim to make: You Come and Go Like a Pop Song is the single best album I have ever owned. I'm a big Chili Peppers fan, so when I heard Josh Klinghoffer was replacing John Frusciante I did the thing any fan would do. I checked his background. The Bicycle Thief intrigued me with its cryptic description on Wikipedia. I bought this album and never looked back.

I wasn't expecting much from a little known Indie group. This blew those expectations out of the water and sky high. Songs like Hurt and Stoned keep my head banging while It's Rainin' (4 am) and Off Street Parking pull at my heart strings. Bob Forrest has a really interesting voice, something you don't see very often. I might even compare his voice to my favorite artist, John Lennon, but maybe not. Josh's guitar playing is superbly fitting. Any Stadium Arcadium, John Frusciante's Curtains, or Indie/Rock fan in general should check this album out. You won't be disappointed.

One last thing I'd like to mention is a song that might get overlooked in the flow of the others. Boy at a Bus Stop is the most beautiful song I have ever heard. It can touch your heart and your soul. If you don't purchase the entire album, buy Boy at a Bus Stop. You'll thank me later, trust me.

Biography

Genre: Rock

Years Active: '90s, '00s

Named for Vittorio De Sica's groundbreaking movie, The Bicycle Thief formed when singer/songwriter/guitarist Bob Forrest's previous group Thelonious Monster disbanded. Though Forrest considered giving up the performing side of the music industry, friends in the LA music scene encouraged him to keep writing and playing songs. He collaborated with Josh Klinghoffer and the duo were signed by Goldenvoice, a local music promotion firm who had recently started a label. To complete the Bicycle Thief's full-length...
Full Bio
You Come and Go Like a Pop Song, The Bicycle Thief
View In iTunes
  • $9.99
  • Genres: Rock, Music
  • Released: May 08, 2001

Customer Ratings

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