
the Ponys
"Wicked City" |
Simple thick guitared
punk with a bit of Richard Hell in the vocals; could
easily have come out of New York in the late ‘70’s.
It would have been a little too poppy to have hit the
Killed by Death lists, but people would still be listening
to it now. Solid. - Razorcake
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To say this rocks insults the word rock.
This rocks with a capitol OCK! - Rocktober |
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Wow, THE PONYS A-side
made me fall down my desk. Hell, the opening chords
and vibe seem taken out of ANTiSEEN's "EP Royalty"
with that squealing loud Fenderish guitar fuzz... when
the vocals come in you will lose the same sense of destruction
and you'll be captured in a very ipnotic raw punk vibe,
like THE STOOGES meets THE GORIES. Flipping the side,
the atmosphere change: fuzz's gone in favour of a semi-acoustic
raw guitar riffing and a more standard 77 alike song
structure, always thrown back into the blues by the
strange drum upbeat. They also add an organ here. Trippy
song, really. They will have an album out on IN THE
RED shortly, so remember I advised you, probably they'll
become the next lo-fi weirdo sensation. - Garbage
Dump
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This is The Ponys' second
7" release, and on Big Neck Records. This Chicago
band blasts through the A-side with “Wicked City”,
with it’s fuzzed out guitars is a great opener.
On the B-side they introduce us to their “Little
Friends” which is the standout here. With the
synth solo and the catchy chorus I was hooked, great
song. - Crime Wave
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The first record from
the PONYS turns out to be their second and it still
melts your heart and burns your brain all on one puck.
"Wicked City" is an ode to Chicago, it's new
anthem, and an instant classic you'll be hearing on
the radio in twenty years when it's finally appreciated.
"Little Friends" is the ultimate song about
coming home to your excited pets, but with all the vibrations
and keyboard sensations that will keep the PONYS yards
above their contemporaries. Everything about the songwriting
is original, and unsoiled by the evil music industry
and all of it's lecherous tentacles. So virginal and
so irresistible, it's essential. Look for their new
records on In The Red in the coming days, and rest easy
knowing that rock-n-roll in Chicago is alive and well.
- Horizontal Action
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These guys play catchy mid tempo 70's
inspired punk rock. - Rock'n'Roll Purgatory |
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Chicago's the Ponys
have just released their latest, "Wicked City"
7 inch, on Big Neck Records. The Ponys feature ex-memebers
of the Guilty Pleasures. To approximate their sound,
throw together the Cure, some old-school punk, the Clone
Defects and fuzzed-up guitar. Side A has the title track,
"Wicked City." That nasty riff is permanently
burned in my brain. It's a cool song with a great little
chorus. This is on the rockin' side of what the Ponys
do. I tell ya though, I love that riff.Side B contains
"Little Friends." On this song, I can definitely
see the Cure comparisons. It reminds me of a Cure song
if they were raised on the tough streets of Chicago
and rocked. That synth solo reminds me of my misspent
youth. The Ponys are a great up and coming band and
this is a great single. File between the Clone Defects
and the Lost Sound. - Cyclops
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A filthy, fuzz-worm
guitar winds it's way through the sleazy garage punk
of the Ponys' ultra-mega a-side, "Wicked City".
Not only have I been there, I am streetwalkin' with
this Chi-town power trio right now, and it's a hot night
in the neon ghetto, brother. "Little Friends"
adds a little Cramps psychosis and Calliope (?) organ
to the punk stripper grind, but keeps from getting it's
threads too wrinkled. Swank. Any band that I might compare
these cats to are either so hopelessly obscure you'd
never get it (Wreck n' the Crew, anyone?), or probably
only exist in my head, so lemme just say, the Ponys
fuckin' rock, Jack. They've got a CBGB's 1975, black-eyed,
needle glam cool to 'em, except they just happen to
be reasonably young, reasonably good looking, and in
the exact right place at the right time, so instead
of puking behind dumpsters for a living they way bands
like this used to do, they're gonna go ahead and make
a million fuckin' dollars one swanky single at a time.
Then they'll start puking behind dumpsters, but it'll
just seem charming at that point. Listen, you wanna
be first or last to ride the Ponys? Thought so. So go
get it. - Sleazegrinder.com
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I had a CD-R copy of
this single for over a year. If it came out then it
would've definitely made the Top 5 best singles of 2002.
Well, it's 2003 and it's now available to the general
public and it will make my top 5 of this year (actually,
the Ponys will probably find themselves in a tie with
themselves cuz their single on Contaminated will be
making the year end high rankings as well). The b-side's
"Little Friends" alone is enough to place
it there for it's WIRE "154"-isms being drenched
in a tube amp pond and it's varnished with LSD carnival
organ fizz. - Smashing Transistors
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2 tracks of straight
up simple mid tempo raw rock-n-roll from this Midwestern
three piece. "Wicked City" has a healthy dose
of distortion (though no nearly as most of the releases
on Big Neck Records) and is a catchy number, though
a bit long-winded and plodding I thought. The flip "Little
Friends" is the winner here, minimal with a hooky
ringing guitar sound and a repetitive chorus that will
stick with you. - Maximum Rock'n'Roll
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The Ponys' So Sentimental
7", which came out on Contaminated a few months
back was fantastic in case you missed it. This second
single on Big Neck is shockingly just as great and maybe
even better making it the strongest debut and sophomore
singles by any band in recent memory. The basics haven't
changed much from the first single. The fuzzed-out,
high treble guitar sound is still there, the "Cure,
but fucked up" references on the vocals still persist,
and the production, while similar, has been beefed up
a bit. The songwriting is also similar but this new
record leans much more towards the pop side of things.
These ain't sugar coated pop anthems, but there's no
denying that "Wicked City" is a super catchy,
massively poppy hit. The ultra repetitive main riff
of the song should be enough to make any jaded hipster
take notice. I dunno if you're average tough guy garage
dude is gonna like these two songs but screw 'em. The
Ponys way of channeling the Velvet Underground through
one of those old UK bands on the Fast Product label,
like early era Mekons, with some serious pop tendencies
added along with a flair for the psychedelic, all approached
from the mindset of a modern day punk band is much more
exciting than what's going on in most of today's garage
punkworld. The only modern band they sometimes remind
me of, and only very slightly, is Black Lipstick, a
name that probably doesn't register on most punk rockers'
radar. I'm guessing that most bands you listen to don't
sound like The Ponys, so you'd be wise to expand your
horizons and pick this record up. They've also just
signed to In The Red if that piques your interest and
if those demos that are floating around are any indication
of what's to come than holy shit, sign me up. Very highly
recommended. - Blankgeneration.com
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Big Neck Records! They
rock…they do…really… Not many labels
are out there like BN… So Bart just put out this
PONYS 7"…"Wicked City"…Sludgey
garage punk rock n roll…it K.I.L.L.S! Fist-shaking,
stuffy barroom swingin', whisky-lovin' rock n roll!
Side B - "Little Friends" super-catchy rock
n roll guitarrrrrrrrr accompanied by an equally catchy
keyboard hook…must've played that song a dozen
times…sooo good… - Blankgeneration.com
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