★★★★★
3/5 Point Pleasant, West Virginia, hard rockers Bobaflex release their impressive fourth album, Hell In My Heart, after a tumultuous four years that saw their former label go bankrupt and the band go through numerous lineup changes. But these trials and tribulations seem to have only made the group stronger. The record opens with a deathbed confession that quickly blasts into the engine-revving anthem "Chemical Valley" and continues on a rampaging path with few slow points...
- www.revolvermag.com
2011-08-29
★★★★★
"Beneath all this genre-jumping there's a seriously good, solid, groove-oriented band." Tales From Dirt Town is the third release from West Virginia rockers Bobaflex. Although eclectic and hard to categorize, the album as a whole is an immensely enjoyable excursion through a bleak dirt town landscape...
- www.metalunderground.com
2010-12-21
★★★★★
"The music draws from many different styles and incorporates elements of funk, grunge, metal and hardcore into many of the tracks." Apologize for Nothing is Bobaflex's sophomore album, released on TVT Records. This album is not Bluegrass or Country, which are the types of influence I would have expected from a band who originates from Point Pleasant, West Virginia...
- www.metalunderground.com
2010-12-21
★★★★★
Sound: If you're familiar with all of Bobaflex's past work then it's more likely than not that you're already a fan of them. Their unknown status is very unfortunate considering the breaks they've gotten (they toured on Dave Mustaine's 'Gigantour' in 2005) but with some fantastic promotion from TVT Records their name is beginning to get known and this new album is their chance to really leave an impact on people...
- www.ultimate-guitar.com
2009-11-15
★★★★★
Sound: If I start describing what Bobaflex sounds like, you're never gonna imagine it. It's on one of those weird bands that like mixing up styles and write songs of whatever comes to their minds, willing to try anything that sounds good. But, unlike their predecessors, they managed to do something a lot bands tried to and sucked hard. Brothers Shaun McCoy (guitar, lead vocals) and Marty McCoy (the same) grew up in a country-side around redneck culture...
- www.ultimate-guitar.com
2009-11-15