Classic Rock Magazine's Scores
- Music
For 2,212 reviews, this publication has graded:
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50% higher than the average critic
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6% same as the average critic
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44% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 0.8 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Music review score: 74
| Highest review score: | Bootleg Series Vol. 18: Through The Open Window, 1956-1963 | |
|---|---|---|
| Lowest review score: | What About Now |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 1,863 out of 2212
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Mixed: 338 out of 2212
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Negative: 11 out of 2212
2212
music
reviews
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- Critic Score
Sign O' The Times might be Prince's apex. .. The extras on this eight-CD/13-LP set, however, include a lot of dry-humping, second-rate material that hints at the decline he would go into in the 90s and beyond. [Oct 2020, p.91]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Sep 25, 2020 -
- Critic Score
It's an album outside its own time, designed to intrigue the dedicated few rather than service the content-consuming many, and if nothing else it's bringing the art of enigmatic charisma back to the world of rock. [Apr 2025, p.74]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Mar 11, 2025 -
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Sporadically great but decidedly patchy, A Moon Shaped Pool is not the sound of a great band dying, more a great band spreading themselves too thinly.- Classic Rock Magazine
- Posted Jun 10, 2016
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- Critic Score
It's probably the Rolling Stones' best album ever. ... Slim pickings of the expanded vinyl package border on the insulting. [Dec 2018, p.94]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Nov 21, 2018 -
- Critic Score
As a collection, Anthology 4 charts a parallel path through the Beatles’ career, one with a tacky postscript in the 21st century. As a Beatles record, it is not very good, offering nothing exciting in terms of rarities (wow, the “strings only” version of Something from the Abbey Road 50th anniversary edition) or insight. [Dec 2025, p.84]- Classic Rock Magazine
- Posted Nov 21, 2025
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- Critic Score
If your bag is relentless hectoring from five angry, tune averse firebrands, feel free to have at it. Doubtlessly great live, though. [Apr 2026, p.81]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Mar 20, 2026 -
- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Jul 24, 2019 -
- Critic Score
Divorced from the visual spectacle--puppets, illusionists, avian transformations, ticker-tape poetry--and the thrill of watching actual Kate Bush actually singing, this audio recording is akin to John Lennon being resurrected to perform the Wedding Album--i.e. only mildly amazing.- Classic Rock Magazine
- Posted Nov 21, 2016
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- Critic Score
Independence Day is normal for Neil: he tests the climate and the atmospherics are depressing. Terrorise Me, a response to the Bataclan outrage, is the key piece. The rest is no faffing and easy listening.- Classic Rock Magazine
- Posted Oct 5, 2017
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- Critic Score
While it does start to get a little repetitive, it's good to hear a band straying off the beaten track too play timeless music just for the sheer hell of it. [Dec 2021, p.72]- Classic Rock Magazine
- Posted Nov 11, 2021
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- Critic Score
Meld[s] jangles, loops, fuzzes, plucks and floaty introspections. Heavy on shoe-gaze, light on Gallagher swagger. [Apr 2022, p.83]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Mar 7, 2022 -
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It's been effectively produced to death. A cold, clinical experience. [Oct 2022, p.77]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Oct 24, 2022 -
- Classic Rock Magazine
- Posted Mar 21, 2016
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- Critic Score
Collects three albums and apposite era odds 'n' sods. [May 2021, p.97]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Apr 5, 2021 -
- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Feb 6, 2015 -
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This fifth edition's half-hour documents their second collaboration with Nurse With Wound and never fully recovers. [Sep 2022, p.83]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Sep 2, 2022 -
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Ultimately a completist's set. [Dec 2023, p.84]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Nov 15, 2023 -
- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Sep 17, 2018 -
- Critic Score
Differing from its predecessor by visiting 2021 studio album I Don’t Live Here Anymore (notably on Harmonia’s Dream) and showcasing a seven-piece band, there’s trickery afoot: some tracks are spliced from multiple takes. It’s hard to argue with the hugeness when it hits though. [Dec 2024, p.74]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Nov 14, 2024 -
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Make no mistake, this is an angry record made by a protest singer whose rage hasn’t dimmed with age (she turns 77 this year), though there are shards of positive light sneaking through.- Classic Rock Magazine
- Posted Feb 1, 2018
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- Critic Score
The album was written on the hop, Newcombe spilling his brains right onto tape, and it shows – imperfections are made into a positive, the songs allowed to just naturally come into being.- Classic Rock Magazine
- Posted Jun 24, 2022
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- Critic Score
The results sound thin, contrived and ultimately laborious. [Aug 2020, p.89]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Jul 29, 2020 -
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For The Sake Of Bethel Woods confirmed that they are not the band they once were but A Bridge To Far flows directly on from there with many of the songs more theoretical in nature. [Dec 2025, p.78]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Nov 13, 2025 -
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It's elegiac, claustrophobic and contagiously disturbed. [Apr 2023, p.79]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted May 1, 2023 -
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He delves into lesser-known parts, like Wheel, a 1973 song about tragic, rural cycles, and he sings Old Road, as a sparse holler, akin to the original. Other songs celebrate the ‘gonzo country’ aims of Jerry Jeff, but Mr Bojangles and his worn-out shoes is still best in show.- Classic Rock Magazine
- Posted Jun 22, 2022
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- Critic Score
Hums Of The Lovin' Spoonful ('66) and Everything Playing ('67) include the odd classic, such as Nashville Cats, but don't gel so well, despite Yanovsky's flamboyant playing. The constant style shifting suits the soundtracks for What's Up, Tiger Lily? and You're A Big Boy Now, with groovy themes a-go-go. [May 2026, p.85]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Apr 27, 2026 -
- Critic Score
It's invariably over-punctuated by hyperactive prog-metallic drumming and paradiddly percussion that leaves little space for their ideas to breath, while memorable hooks or riffs get buried in the chaos. [Sep 2023, p.79]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Aug 29, 2023 -
- Critic Score
It’s bashed out in an exuberant blast of piano-stonkin’ late-60s rock’n’soul that occasionally wanders into poppy, kitschy Elton John territory, but owes most of its groove to the lean, mean, stray-cat blues of Beggars Banquet.- Classic Rock Magazine
- Posted Oct 28, 2015
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- Critic Score
Jazz standard Lullaby Of The Leaves begins in husky torch song mode, but gains interest with a brassy Bonamassa guitar solo, like a Bond theme played past midnight in a Chicago dive. When these rockers go reggae for Addicted, though, it is, as usual, a step too far.- Classic Rock Magazine
- Posted Feb 1, 2018
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- Critic Score
Its shorter, pacier tracks up the dynamism, making for a pummelling - if somewhat relentless - experience as deep-strata hardcore tracks like Detroit and Blackage shift gears into more ponderous interludes. [Jun 2025, p.72]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Apr 25, 2025 -
- Critic Score
His words and sentiments are left deliberately smudged and indefinite in places; sardonic Dylan phrasing sticks to some words, double-tracked Lennon wails on others.- Classic Rock Magazine
- Posted Sep 19, 2017
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- Critic Score
Although micro-melody whimsy is at its heart, there’s a Tangs/Radiophonic Workshop slant that gives tracks such as Midwinter Rites a spooky Kill List/Children Of The Stones edge.- Classic Rock Magazine
- Posted Mar 28, 2017
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- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Jul 6, 2020 -
- Critic Score
Despite lofty ambitions to write a letter 'from God to humanity' on Restless Souls, these are counter-attacked by Rebel Girl, an overstuffed, over-sweetened, male gaze-heavy, lovelorn confection that completely overrides the potential of its title. ... nevertheless, Lifeforms is beautifully produced and catchy as hell, earning itself a spot on any intergalactic playlist. [Oct 2021, p.73]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Sep 22, 2021 -
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Plenty here to admire--if you're in your most po-faced mood. [Summer 2014, p.95]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Dec 18, 2014 -
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As mood music it’s a stunner, the perfect complement to a lost weekend plotting your next Ubermensch moves in a haze of opium. But you can’t dance to it, that much is for sure.- Classic Rock Magazine
- Posted Aug 10, 2017
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- Critic Score
Those with sensitive ears will find its more extreme moments indigestible, but it remains impressive stuff. [May 2023, p.78]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Jun 7, 2023 -
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COS is a lot darker and more claustrophobic than Thomas's press notes propose. [Sep 2014, p.94]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Dec 18, 2014 -
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For all its flaws, Rewind The Film shows they're not ready for the glue factory just yet. [Oct 2013, p.86]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Oct 23, 2013 -
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Treasured songs suffer repeated acts of vandalism. On many nights, Dylan and the guys howl the chorus of Like A Rolling Stone frat party-style. Conversely, the 1974 release Forever Young (from the Planet Waves album) gets regular care and rises in stature as a Boomer benediction. [Oct 2024, p.83]- Classic Rock Magazine
- Posted Sep 19, 2024
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- Critic Score
An eclectic work, Lazaretto shows off White's multi-instrumental, seasoned-producer lineage with some charismatic flashes. As a complete exercise in songcraft, however, it's a little thin. [Summer 2014, p.88]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Dec 18, 2014 -
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If you’re a fan of the more raucous, high-octane twang-stompers this band are best known for, you might find this a strangely sedate, mid-tempo affair.- Classic Rock Magazine
- Posted Jun 21, 2017
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- Critic Score
The mood varies across the record. [Nov 2023, p.81]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Oct 20, 2023 -
- Critic Score
The songs themselves are among Lennon's worst. .... This reissue comes in a box full of new mixes - several CDs or vinyl LPs of Raw Mixes, Ultimate mixes and Out-Takes, none of which add anything much other than a sense that one's ears have been syringed for no good reason. [Summer 2024, p.83]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Jul 12, 2024 -
- Critic Score
Quiet Town and Runaway Horses exhibit tender lyrical themes, and there's brief respite in the dreamy haze of Sleepwalker and Pressure Machine. However, nostalgia and the shattering of childhood idylls reoccur through In the Car Outside and In Another Life. [Oct 2021, p.78]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Sep 15, 2021 -
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While the album is destined to remain underground, you just know Childish is in his element right there amid the grit and grime. [Sep 2019, p.84]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Aug 20, 2019 -
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This slender exercise in flimsy whimsy boasts plenty f charm but few substantial songs. [Jun 2021, p.78]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted May 13, 2021 -
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Like their 60s albums, it’s a hodgepodge of self-penned songs and songs written by others, with a few vintage rave-ups thrown into the mix--‘mix’ being the operative word for this patchy affair.- Classic Rock Magazine
- Posted Jul 7, 2016
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- Critic Score
They need just a little more musical and emotional grit to avoid fully surrendering to pastel-shaded midlife mellowness. [Jun 2021, p.76]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Apr 29, 2021 -
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You don't come to this band foe an easy rode and a soothing soundtrack to while away the hours; you come to them to be pummelled with some horrible but mesmerising noise. And on Synthesizer they deliver in abundance once again. [Nov 2024, p.75]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Oct 11, 2024 -
- Critic Score
A fun album, but one in need of trimming and extra heft. [Aug 2022, p.69]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Jul 22, 2022 -
- Classic Rock Magazine
- Posted Jul 2, 2015
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- Critic Score
Frontman Brandon Coleman is alike a more muscular, less reedy Neil Young. .... A turbulent album. [Aug 2024, p.72]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Jul 25, 2024 -
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Some imaginative arrangements--notably on a brass-heavy Ghost Of Santa Fe--can’t disguise the fact that the transcendent qualities this music demands are too often absent.- Classic Rock Magazine
- Posted Dec 18, 2015
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- Critic Score
A little unwieldy in places, but still pleasingly timeless. [Jul 2019, p.85]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted May 30, 2019 -
- Critic Score
This is a set of unlistenable, wigged-out, repetitive, directionless grooves in the main, but we love ’em anyway.- Classic Rock Magazine
- Posted Dec 20, 2017
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- Critic Score
Padded out with uneven live albums, indifferent remixes and anodyne film soundtrack songs, this 120-track package makes for depressingly arid listening in places. That said, no anthology that includes the heart-soaring Absolute Beginners or the high-gloss Let’s Dance can be considered a total wash-out.- Classic Rock Magazine
- Posted Oct 12, 2018
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- Critic Score
Thomas might have this new album down as the James Gang teaming up with Tangerine Dream, but PU exist in a world their own, one that bears only passing resemblance to reality.- Classic Rock Magazine
- Posted Sep 26, 2017
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- Critic Score
Album number three takes Anna Meredith-style neoclassical and jumbles it with a woozy mix of Broadcast, Hounds of Love and glockenspiel gamelan. [Oct 2018, p.89]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Sep 18, 2018 -
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They're also still some way off leading any packs, but they're making up ground. [Feb 2020, p.90]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Jan 16, 2020 -
- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Apr 29, 2021 -
- Critic Score
[A] blend of instrumental moods, torpid 80s indie and self-regarding songs that never entirely clear their launchpad. [Oct 2021, p.79]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Sep 24, 2021 -
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Romy Vager's vocals are raw, earnest, and Tambourine is Brain Worms distilled, a taut memoir of remote mourning. [Jul 2023, p.87]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Jun 21, 2023 -
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They're clearly having a blast, in every sense - there's enough noirish sarcasm to make that clear - but there's also a punk nihilism at play that makes this debut album a compellingly unsettling listen. [Sep 2025, p.77]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Aug 26, 2025 -
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Employing rhythmic sideswipes, jarring guitar clangour and dub bass frequencies through a production filter marked 'Mud'. [Summer 2025, p.79]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Jun 20, 2025 -
- Critic Score
Hard Light works so well because rather than cling on to relevance during the wilderness years, Drop Nineteen have simply waited and let the world catch up with them. [Dec 2023, p.77]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Nov 14, 2023 -
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For their fans accustomed to the clattering joyride only Mastodon provide, this will suffice for now. [Summer 2014, p.92]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Dec 18, 2014 -
- Critic Score
There are passages of experimentation around this album’s edges, such as the post-nuclear drones of Roots Remain, and electronic effects that suggest prolonged exposure to mid-period Tangerine Dream. But Mastodon never really develop these intriguing tendencies.- Classic Rock Magazine
- Posted Mar 22, 2017
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- Critic Score
Scratch the surface and nothing really shines. This nod to the past feels more like regression than a return to former glories.- Classic Rock Magazine
- Posted Mar 13, 2017
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- Critic Score
It's a fine line between hypnotic and soporific, but he's usually on the right side. [Nov 2018, p.83]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Oct 17, 2018 -
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It's still awesome, of course, just don't expect to enjoy it. [May 2013, p.85]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Jun 21, 2013 -
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It cuts and blazes and works well live in all its kinetic abandon but, if Shining really want to lay claim to a new genre, they need to integrate their progressive elements into the mix rather than add them as a side option.- Classic Rock Magazine
- Posted Oct 22, 2015
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- Critic Score
Dream Nails are the 21st-century Mambo Taxi. Who? Exactly. [May 2020, p.83]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Aug 27, 2020 -
- Critic Score
Overall these Merseyside extreme-metal veterans sound a little unfocused and uninspired on this record, falling back on tired retro-metal tropes. [Oct 2021, p.72]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Sep 20, 2021 -
- Critic Score
It only ever recalls a fuzz-jangling, beefed-up Sundays is surprising, but yeah, it'll do. [Dec 2025, p.79]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Nov 13, 2025 -
- Critic Score
Not essential, then, but well worth a peek through the window. [Nov 2019, p.84]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Oct 22, 2019 -
- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Dec 10, 2019 -
- Critic Score
A collection of songs so sugar-coated it should probably have been packaged with insulin. [Oct 2025, p.72]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Sep 17, 2025 -
- Critic Score
Bela Lugosi's Dead was a happy accident. The rest of the material finds a band fumbling for direction, even touching on ska, before an eerie delay appeared to invent their sound for them. [Dec 2018, p.93]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Dec 3, 2018 -
- Critic Score
This is modern life sliced up with the precision of a medical scalpel and then force-fed through a high-density filter of piss and vinegar.- Classic Rock Magazine
- Posted Feb 24, 2017
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- Classic Rock Magazine
- Posted Jan 2, 2018
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- Critic Score
The result is both shamelessly derivative and gloriously entertaining. [Jul 2013, p.88]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Jun 26, 2013 -
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Finds their former highs trapped behind glass, blurred and beclouded like the past year has been for all of us. [Jul 2021, p.86]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Jun 3, 2021 -
- Critic Score
Sweet-voiced grrrl-angst vocals meet grunge dynamics; non-committal Veruca Salt do post-Nirvana loud bit/miserable bit. I Mean, it's fine, but... meh. [Summer 2022, p.79]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Jun 30, 2022 -
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It's a roguish enough distillation of Aussie rock's most okish corners. [Sep 2022, p.73]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Aug 19, 2022 -
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If it’s dumb fun in the sun you’re after, these are the rodents you’re looking for. [Sep 2024, p.69]- Classic Rock Magazine
- Posted Aug 14, 2024
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- Critic Score
There’s a rejuvenated feel to this reunion album of the ‘dream team’, which is themed around the impact of sleep disruption from sleepwalking to nightmares. [Mar 2025, p.77]- Classic Rock Magazine
- Posted Mar 5, 2025
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- Critic Score
Perfection, though, remains unattainable thanks to Barney Sumner, whose enthusiasm is such that he adds an uncommon amount of whoops and yelps to songs that really do not need any. [Aug 2013, p.89]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Aug 21, 2013 -
- Critic Score
The Minus 5 remain a star-heavy Trojan horse for McCaughey's songwriting. [Jun 2015, p.97]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted May 12, 2015 -
- Critic Score
A little too shiny and over produced in places, but Life Journey is a trip worth taking. [Jul 2014, p.92]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Dec 18, 2014 -
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High Flyin' is fine, a romp, a moment captured in time. ... It remains more a curiosity than a necessity, though. [Jun 2023, p.82]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted May 3, 2023 -
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While this ninth starts well it ultimately nags 'could do better'. And they have. [May 2023, p.81]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Apr 4, 2023 -
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The majority of this all star tribute treads an inappropriately conformist path. [Apr 2022, p.83]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Mar 7, 2022 -
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A sultry, smouldering, non-committal vocal meanders over bass-heavy backdrops. [Apr 2021, p.89]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Mar 3, 2021 -
- Critic Score
The result borders on easy listening with a yacht-pop vibe, before the psychedelic starbursts come out to play. [Nov 2022, p.75]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Oct 28, 2022 -
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Matches vintage MaximumRock'N'Roll short, sharp, DIY hardcore blurts with kindergarten puppetry to baffling effect. [Aug 2023, p.79]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Jul 21, 2023 -
- Critic Score
It grows with listens, and at its best (as on Hold On), Clark’s guitar/soul-beat fusion is smooth and stylish. But some of it is just (whisper it) a bit boring.- Classic Rock Magazine
- Posted Sep 3, 2015
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- Critic Score
Bob Dylan regulars Larry Campbell and Tony Garnier pop up but this isn’t a star-studded exercise, more of a stylish platter aimed at grown-ups.- Classic Rock Magazine
- Posted May 13, 2016
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- Critic Score
The nagging sense remains that way too much effort has been put into reinterpreting other artists’ material instead of writing their own. [Nov 2024, p.76]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Oct 28, 2024 -
- Critic Score
Somewhat lacking in real character of its ow, there is nevertheless a certain charm to this album, and it's sure to trigger a nostalgia trip in those who came of age at the turn of the current century. [Oct 2019, p.89]- Classic Rock Magazine
Posted Oct 3, 2019