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Sep 20, 2016With We're All Gonna Die, Dawes have crafted an album rife with riddles and musical poetry, whose meaning may take a few listens to completely grab you. However, when it does finally hit you, it's hard to shake the feeling that Dawes have opened a door into the cosmos.
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UncutSep 23, 2016[Producer Blake Mills] deftly applied his gift for song-serving ornamentation and transformed sluggish Dawes into an aggressively inventive band. [Nov 2016, p.26]
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Sep 20, 2016The band's breezy harmonies (aided by pals from Jim James to Alabama Shakes' Brittany Howard) on songs like "Picture of a Man" and "No Good Reason" are a perfect complement to his gentle malaise.
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Sep 20, 2016Since their music so effortlessly recalls the best of Jackson Browne, consider We’re All Gonna Die to be Dawes’ version of Browne’s 80’s curve ball Lawyers In Love, a stylistic detour with high points that outweigh the misfires.
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Sep 20, 2016Frontman Taylor Goldsmith experiments with R&B-style falsetto on songs like the title track, and the plaintive piano songs of yore now lean more heavily on keyboard synths and textural effects.
User score distribution:
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Positive: 3 out of 7
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Mixed: 2 out of 7
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Negative: 2 out of 7
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Nov 20, 2022Truly excellent album
Almost all perfect songs
Dawes departs from their traditional sound, embracing a new, more rock-y, one. -
Jan 13, 2017
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Sep 26, 2016