User ratings in Music are temporarily disabled. More info
- Summary: The debut full-length solo release for The Futureheads lead singer followed a rocky three years that saw the end of his marriage and a bipolar diagnosis that eventually put him in the hospital.
Buy Now
- Record Label: Sirenspire Records
- Genre(s): Pop/Rock, Alternative/Indie Rock
- More Details and Credits »
Score distribution:
-
Positive: 5 out of 6
-
Mixed: 1 out of 6
-
Negative: 0 out of 6
-
Jun 8, 2016To have taken the most complex psychological crisis and distilled it into a record which is not only so powerful but also so coherent and assured is awe-inspiring. Malody is a towering testimony to the power of song and marks the (re)birth of an exceptional artist.
-
MojoJun 8, 2016Malody might be uneasy listening but it's as brave as it is completely unexpected. [Jul 2016, p.90]
-
Jun 9, 2016It’s a buoyantly hopeful album where Hyde gives a final wave goodbye to his darkest days before moving on to greener pastures.
-
Jul 15, 2016It’ll be a shock to the system for Futureheads fanatics anticipating herky-jerky guitar pop, but with the distraught Monster Again, nakedly vulnerable Thunder Song and the graceful, elegiac titular song standing out; it makes for an intensely cathartic and wholly absorbing experience for listeners prepared to dump their preconceptions at the door.
-
UncutJun 8, 2016There are moments, such as in "Crazy Love" and "Monster Again," where the vibe is less open-hearted confessional than "Futurehead Does Andrew Lloyd Webber." Even so, this is a brave and extremely poignant piece of work. [Jul 2016, p.74]
-
Q MagazineJun 8, 2016A song cycle that ruminates on his condition and travails to an orch-pop soundtrack of piano, strings and voice. [#361, p.111]