"A must have for fans of
Backyard Babies,
Mötley Crüe, and
Hanoi Rocks" states a sticker on the cover of
Gemini Five's full-length debut,
Babylon Rockets. Unlike
Mötley Crüe though,
Gemini Five doesn't posses the singalong, arena-worthy choruses that Nikki Sixx and Co. possessed on releases like
Too Fast for Love and
Shout at the Devil. And comparing
Gemini Five to
Hanoi Rocks makes no sense whatsoever, beyond that both bands liked eyeliner and lipstick. (
Hanoi's recordings were much rawer and punk-based than the sounds here.) Interestingly though, there's also an obvious electro-dance vibe throughout most the record, as evidenced by a cover of "You Spin Me Round (Like a Record)" that sounds akin to
Placebo (especially singer Tin Star's Brian Molko-esque vocals). Elsewhere you get a hard-edged power ballad ("Hardcore") and expected hard rockers (the album-opening title track, "Poison Envy," etc.). It's an interesting idea to try and merge high-energy, pre-
Poison/
Warrant glam with modern-day sounds, and unlike the bands they list as "comparisons," the lyrics aren't about girls and partying hearty. Maybe
Gemini Five have created a new rock subgenre: "thinking man's glam." ~ Greg Prato