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Heavy Glory Image
Metascore
65

Generally favorable reviews - based on 6 Critic Reviews What's this?

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  • Summary: The debut full-length solo release from Iceage's Elias Rønnenfelt features guest appearances by Fauzia and Joanne Robertson.
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Score distribution:
  1. Positive: 3 out of 6
  2. Negative: 0 out of 6
  1. 80
    This is a relatively direct album, and it gives you all you need to know about it within the first ten minutes, but its reliance on a consistent sonic palette only increases its power. Of course, Rønnenfelt is the star of the show – his name is on the marquee this time – but the songs are a very, very close second.
  2. Nov 12, 2024
    77
    Rønnenfelt wrestles with making sense of the fleetingness that surrounds him, in a time of uncertainty that manages to still document his persevering charm with a candid ache.
  3. Oct 31, 2024
    73
    Overall, Rønnenfelt seems to focus more on discovery than on crafting a cohesive whole. But Heavy Glory’s most assured tracks—like “Doomsday Childsplay,” with its mournful, Western stomp, or the Lou Reed-influenced “No One Else” (complete with talk-sung vocals and a bassline nicked wholesale from “Walk on the Wild Side”)—show Rønnenfelt’s experimenting and broadened emotional palette paying off considerably.
  4. Oct 31, 2024
    60
    Thematically, it sounds fairly cohesive, but the songs themselves, lyrically, vary from solid to great, to moments of cloying sentimentality. That’s not to say that Heavy Glory is a bad record, just one that’s a bit more challenging than Iceage fans may have come to expect.
  5. Oct 31, 2024
    50
    It’s almost as if the record has been pieced together from three parts: first, a series of demos (which may indeed fit with the record having begun its life during the singer’s series of low-key fan-booked gigs throughout 2020); second, a handful of tracks that posit Elias as a scratchy, troubadour Mick Jagger (a look which suits him completely, pun intended); and third, a pair of gorgeously-recorded and perfectly delivered cover versions (Spacemen 3’s ‘Walking With Jesus’, retitled ‘Sound of Confusion’, and Townes van Zandt’s ‘No Place To Fall’). Unfortunately, these follow a series of tracks on which Elias tries on others’ identities a little too obviously.
  6. Uncut
    Oct 31, 2024
    50
    Echoes of Conor Oberst abound but the tunes lack the same charm, with even covers of Spacemen 3 (“Sound Of Confusion”) and Townes Van Zandt (“No Place To Fall”) unable to keep ears pricked up. [Dec 2024, p.37]