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A Wave That Will Never Break Image
Metascore
72

Generally favorable reviews - based on 5 Critic Reviews What's this?

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  • Summary: WU LYF's first full-length studio release since 2011's Go Tell Fire To The Mountain was produced by Sonic Boom and is only available on http://worldunite.org and Bandcamp.
Score distribution:
  1. Positive: 3 out of 5
  2. Negative: 0 out of 5
  1. Apr 15, 2026
    90
    A Wave That Will Never Break is a nearly flawless comeback for WU LYF. The variation between the tracks and the pure emotion shown throughout has me asking why it took them so damn long to make another album and why they split in the first place after their classic debut, but it also proves that the band still has plenty left in the tank.
  2. Apr 15, 2026
    80
    Where WU LYF once teetered on the cliff-edge, barking every utterance like they knew it might be their last, they're now sure-footed and comfortable, speaking with a conviction that can only come with experience.
  3. Apr 15, 2026
    76
    WU LYF’s ambitions have not abated in the slightest since Go Tell Fire to the Mountain, an album that eased its path towards the rafters with cathedral reverb sourced from an actual abandoned church. They’ve just become more clarified, stripping away the booming echo that once obscured that group’s limber musicianship, while Roberts has sheared the most jagged nodes from his trachea and, with them, a language of completely unprecedented vowel sounds.
  4. Uncut
    Apr 24, 2026
    60
    For all the overwrought sentiment, A Wave... is strangely compelling. [Jun 2026, p.35]
  5. Apr 15, 2026
    50
    Much of what set WU LYF apart from other UK pop-rockers has been dulled to match their ambitions and ages. It's maximalist minimalism (or is that minimalist maximalism?) at its most heartfelt and bland, similar to other heartsick stadium "rockers" like Coldplay and Imagine Dragons.