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Nobody Loves You More Image
Metascore
89

Universal acclaim - based on 17 Critic Reviews What's this?

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  • Summary: The debut full-length solo release from The Breeders' Kim Deal was self-produced and features contributions by fellow Breeders bandmates Kelley Deal, Mando Lopez, Jim Macpherson, and Britt Walford, as well as Ayse Hassan, Jack Lawrence, Raymond McGinley, and Fay Milton.
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Score distribution:
  1. Positive: 17 out of 17
  2. Mixed: 0 out of 17
  3. Negative: 0 out of 17
  1. Nov 13, 2024
    100
    Nobody Loves You More is a singularly uplifting, life-affirming listen, where joy and despair, love and loss, are irrevocably entwined, and kept afloat by Deal’s unfailing lightness of touch. [Dec 2024, p.82]
  2. Uncut
    Nov 13, 2024
    90
    Kim Deal’s solo debut is sonically wide-reaching yet still intimate, exemplified by one of its best tracks, “Are You Mine”. Pensively dreamy, the tune pairs Lynchian doo-wop with an alt.country twang. .... The title track is a stunner too, all swelling strings and booming brass that brings to mind Scott Walker’s avant-pop. [Dec 2024, p.33]
  3. Nov 22, 2024
    90
    Nobody Loves You More is some of her finest music yet, and while any of these songs would've been a standout with one of her other projects, it's all the sweeter that they're hers alone.
  4. Nov 20, 2024
    80
    There’s something freer to the music on Nobody Loves You More, which suits Deal well and has made this record worth the wait.
  5. Nov 22, 2024
    80
    Throughout, Deal’s authorial voice remains constant, her mellifluous pop often undercut by gnarlier interference. But there are late-career surprises – none finer than the strings arrangements that arrive on the pristine title track, or the horns that punctuate Coast.
  6. 80
    It’s a superb album, full of welcome surprises.
  7. Dec 9, 2024
    79
    Her frank storytelling makes “Coast” the most vivid song on Nobody Loves You More, like the account of a beachside outlaw whose levity is its own triumph. The best moments are when Deal slows her pace and stretches out like a daydream, recalling, more than any of her other bands, her sublime cover of Chris Bell’s “You And Your Sister” with This Mortal Coil in 1991.

See all 17 Critic Reviews

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