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Life, Death And Dennis Hopper Image
Metascore
78

Generally favorable reviews - based on 7 Critic Reviews What's this?

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  • Summary: The life of Dennis Hopper is at the center of the 25-track release from Mike Scott and The Waterboys that includes guest appearances by Fiona Apple, Steve Earle, Barny Fletcher, Taylor Goldsmith, Anana Kaye, Bruce Springsteen, and Sugarfoot.
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Score distribution:
  1. Positive: 6 out of 7
  2. Negative: 0 out of 7
  1. Apr 3, 2025
    80
    In the end, it comes down to little moments of bliss, and those seven or eight words. "I don't know how I made it" Scott sings, as Taylor Goldsmith essays an angelic harmony. "but I made it". As a funeral march, it's a humdinger. [Apr 2025, p.22]
  2. Apr 3, 2025
    80
    The hit rate is high, and Mike Scott is clearly having fun cutting himself free from The Waterboys' past, and playing fast and loose - much like the mercurial subject of this album. [May 2025, p.88]
  3. Jun 4, 2025
    80
    Scott’s ambition has resulted in a musical vehicle that’s blindingly good at times, and Life, Dennis & Death Hopper is a singular addition to the Waterboys’ impressive canon.
  4. Apr 4, 2025
    75
    Kudos to Mike Scott and The Waterboys for undertaking such a thematically esoteric project, which is certain to reward its most invested listeners.
  5. Apr 9, 2025
    70
    Like Hopper's grand film maudit The Last Movie, Life, Death and Dennis Hopper doesn't quite manage a satisfying ending, but what it delivers along the way is impassioned, literate, and daring, and it's more than worthy of repeated listening.
  6. Apr 3, 2025
    70
    There is so much to unpack here across a myriad of styles from jazz to folk and blues but it all seems to fit the subject at its heart, Dennis Hopper. It may not all work but when it does it is mesmerising.
  7. Apr 3, 2025
    50
    The album’s sprawl and ambition is laudable, but also its downfall, as it often feels like a bit of a chore to wade through. As an album it’s too patchy, and as a document of a man’s life, a well-researched biography is probably a better bet.