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Zero 7
Stars indicate the most critically-acclaimed albums.
Weird Revolution

Mixed or average reviews
Based on 9 critic reviews
How did we calculate this?
Based on 11 votes
Read user comments
Rate this album >
Album Info
Label: Hollywood
Release Date: 28 August 2001
Discs: 1 disc
Genre(s): Alternative, Rock
Summary
The first album in three years from the always bizarre Texans includes about two-thirds of the tracks from their unreleased 1998 effort "After The Astronaut."
Also On The Web: Official Album Site Official Artist Site
What The Critics Said
All critic scores are converted to a 100-point scale. If a critic does not indicate a score, we assign a score based on the general impression given by the text of the review. Learn more...
Sonicnet
The Surfers teeter on the brink of conventional rock values. However, throughout the new album, singer Gibby Haynes drives the proverbial truck into the ditch with rambling psychotic speeches.
Read Full Review >E! Online
Anchored in the surreal goofball art rock, club beats and bubblegum punk that made anomaly hits like 1996's "Pepper" so cool, frontman Gibby Haines and gang sugarcoat their standardized tales of decay and hallucinogens but keep some delicious bitterness intact.
Read Full Review >Spin
At its best, Weird Revolution is danceable and degenerate... It's a tight package, but the holes start to show on the title track... [Oct 2001, p.132]
Entertainment Weekly
A typical morass of computerized beat science, vague exoticism, and singer Gibby Haynes' crackpot mantras... [7 Sep 2001, p.164]
Alternative Press
The absence of Paul Leary's drug-fried guitar is unconscionable. [Nov 2001, p.78]
Blender
The wan, wimpy Weird Revolution relies on tired drum loops and flat rap vocals. [Aug/Sep 2001, p.121]
The Onion (A.V. Club)
Weird Revolution sounds dated and quaint, both in its "Pepper" rehashes ("Dracula From Houston," "The Shame Of Life") and in its halfhearted attempts at caustic shock ("Shit Like That") and misfit mission statements ("The Weird Revolution").
Read Full Review >Magnet
In spite of its shortcomings, there's something fascinating about this saccharine new Butthole brew.... Like driving by a head-on collision late at night, it's almost impossible to avert your eyes. [#51, p.88]
Pitchfork
The Butthole Surfers have finally become shocking only in their sheer banality, like a watered-down mix of the worst Beck and Perry Farrell material you can imagine.
Read Full Review >What Our Users Said
The average user rating for this album is 6.0 (out of 10) based on 11 User Votes
Note: User votes are NOT included in the Metascore calculation.
Gutted Pete gave it a0:
the buttholes have been my favourite band for 20 years. this album made my fingers go numb with shock at it's awfulness, and for the first time made me regret my 18 year old buttholes tattoo. it's closer to 'they might be giants' than 'the shah sleeps in lee harvey's grave. i think i'm going to cry...
Nate K gave it a10:
BHS best album, none of there other albums have this much of a meaning and it hits you on the first song, join the Weird Revolution people, I will admit that there a a few key songs on other BHS albums that have to be noted, some as good and some better than those on this album, but none have as many great tracks on one album. Basicly we dont want weirdness from the normal man, We do not want to be freaked out by the normal man, We want to out freak the normal man.
Ryan W gave it a10:
awesome album
bobby j gave it a 10:
Feed your children on acid and this album.
David H. gave it a 4:
weak
Trader Woody gave it a 7:
Don't expect locust abortion technician, but the Buttholes still stomp on the average chumps out there
crusher gave it an 8:
Not their best, but a cool record nonetheless.
