- Record Label: Nonesuch
- Release Date: Apr 4, 2025
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Apr 9, 2025The result exists in a middle ground between the band's artful indie rock and a contemporary classical suite. If you like Dirty Projectors, chances are you'll enjoy Song of the Earth, but this music lacks the immediacy and insistent pulse of the band's best work.
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MojoApr 9, 2025Heroic in its scope and shifting moods, it's more performance piece than repeated listen. [May 2025, p.93]
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May 1, 2025Song of the Earth resists the classification as a straightforward commentary on climate change. Instead, it depicts a complex emotional terrain where crisis and hope are in dialogue.
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Apr 9, 2025It remains to be seen whether Song of the Earth is just another curious left-turn in a discography full of them, or whether it signals a new Dirty Projectors epoch. What is certain though is that Song of the Earth is a thematically singular album.
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The WireMay 6, 2025Things get weird and heavy with “Gimme Bread”, tense orchestral gestures and disorienting delay effects almost completely obscuring Longstreth’s lyrical allusions to hunger and scarcity. When the arrangements breathe, as in the woodwind-kissed simplicity of “At Home” or the Mount Eerie-featuring “Twin Aspens”, the album achieves a fragile grace. [Jun 2025, p.50]
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UncutApr 9, 2025It's a wild ride, by turns embracing and disorienting, its tracks ranging from brief instrumental stings to stately arias, though the highlights are the moments when Longstreth's pop sensibility is most audible. [Apr 2025, p.35]