Dusted Magazine's Scores
- Music
For 3,287 reviews, this publication has graded:
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53% higher than the average critic
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5% same as the average critic
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42% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 0.1 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Music review score: 73
| Highest review score: | Ys | |
|---|---|---|
| Lowest review score: | Rain In England |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 2,670 out of 3287
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Mixed: 581 out of 3287
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Negative: 36 out of 3287
3287
music
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Critic Score
Ultimately, Conquistador contains few surprises, but its stark beauty and understated textural depth prove that Carlson is still finding new and engaging ways of repeating himself.- Dusted Magazine
- Posted May 8, 2018
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- Critic Score
There are spoken words buried in these machine-like architectures, only the tone, not the sense of them coming through the music. It is a rather lovely space that Hopkins creates, lyrical but inhabited, precise and well-lighted and buoyant.- Dusted Magazine
- Posted May 8, 2018
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Dupuis’ reference may run more to punk and indie, rather than disco/R&B, but the effect is eerily similar: gender studies inquiries encased in the kind of music that once looked uncritically at female disempowerment. Yet while it’s serious stuff, it’s also fun, with big bashing choruses and somersaulting strings of words that surprise and entertain.- Dusted Magazine
- Posted May 2, 2018
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It’s the earnest balance Morris strikes between brokenness and openness--his willingness to savor the condition of being broken open--that makes the experience of this music so deeply sustaining.- Dusted Magazine
- Posted Apr 18, 2018
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You may not need to be a Fugazi fan to appreciate Messthetics, though anyone can draw lines from the fiery complexities of Instrument to these explosive compositions. The nervy aggression of post-punk joins with jazz-rock’s virtuosity here, and it’s good stuff all the way through.- Dusted Magazine
- Posted Apr 16, 2018
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On the Tylers’ third and best album, The Ox and the Ax, there is no obscuring the harsh world conjured by these songs with elaborate instrumentation, overwrought singing or dance tempos. Recorded in crystalline clarity, the instrumental accompaniments are usually little more than guitar or banjo, and while they’re skillfully played, it is the Tylers’ voices, unadorned and rich, that are the center of this record.- Dusted Magazine
- Posted Apr 11, 2018
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When drums and fiddle swagger, it feels like a Krautrock hoedown. Still, the harmonium exerts enough of a presence to give the music a devotional quality. In combination with the chanting, this music invites you to surrender to reverence without telling you what to believe.- Dusted Magazine
- Posted Apr 11, 2018
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And this one, too, is as sardonic and soulful, as hilariously outraged and superbly tuneful as any rock-pop record you’ll hear in 2018.- Dusted Magazine
- Posted Apr 5, 2018
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Now Only is a messy record, brimming with musical ideas that often drop out before resolving, and with lyrics so factual as to sometimes verge on dull. But in the name of progress, this messiness feels hard-won. You can learn from death, and Elverum proves again that you can make art from it.- Dusted Magazine
- Posted Apr 4, 2018
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Turns out, the news is that Roberts has made the most unabashedly gorgeous record of his career.- Dusted Magazine
- Posted Apr 2, 2018
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Andrews’ band is first rate, particularly organist Daniel Walker, whose weedy, wavering hum imbues these songs with a mournful depth of field. ... What’s new, here, however, is how damned strong she is, how fierce a belter, how indomitable a chronicler of the middle-class struggle.- Dusted Magazine
- Posted Mar 29, 2018
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Even as the album’s often joyful, always human stories unfold and crackle with inspiration, intoxication or love, the haunting sense of irreparable change lingers.- Dusted Magazine
- Posted Mar 27, 2018
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Where earlier tracks tended, endearingly, to drift and wander, these new ones move not faster but with more purpose, as if they have somewhere to get to.- Dusted Magazine
- Posted Mar 22, 2018
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This isn’t the flare and fade of passing fancy, but the kind of deep and considered work that comes from a long-term union that has had time to hone in on its strengths.- Dusted Magazine
- Posted Mar 19, 2018
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- Critic Score
The pulsing, nodding, whisper-y grooves are a kind of accomplishment, too. Subdued, sure, enveloping and lucidly becalmed, you can float on them like warm salt water, no effort required at all.- Dusted Magazine
- Posted Mar 14, 2018
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Yet as disjointed as Nap Eyes’ free-associations can be, they capture a vivid part of life, the drifting area where you’ve acquired adult freedoms but adult focus still dangles out of reach.- Dusted Magazine
- Posted Mar 14, 2018
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- Critic Score
Joachim Nordwall, Daniel Fagge Fagerström and Henrik Rylander are enough of a quorum and enough in sync with one another to make a defining closing statement.- Dusted Magazine
- Posted Mar 13, 2018
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You end up thinking, well, of course, a band this ruthlessly observant and unflinching is going to be mad a lot of the time, but how great that they bring the same intensity to love.- Dusted Magazine
- Posted Mar 8, 2018
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- Dusted Magazine
- Posted Mar 7, 2018
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- Critic Score
The record is energetic and often rollicking. Paternoster’s singing and intense guitar antics are center stage, but her longtime bandmates King Mike (bass) and Jarrett Dougherty (drums) are essential to the band’s potent combination of groove and snarl.- Dusted Magazine
- Posted Mar 5, 2018
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The proceedings would be a lot less palatable if they didn’t often achieve a forceful, unhinged immediacy; amid the heavy themes and brash posturing, there’s still room for the band to elbow in some loud, rousing real life.- Dusted Magazine
- Posted Mar 5, 2018
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Sunwatchers II is an enjoyable listen, and its energy and good intentions are admirable; it’s clear that Sunwatchers take the spiritual and political implications of musical ecstasy seriously.- Dusted Magazine
- Posted Mar 1, 2018
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- Dusted Magazine
- Posted Mar 1, 2018
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- Critic Score
Freedom’s Goblin is remarkably coherent. Ty Segall may never have to make another album, so definitively does this one capture his art and possibilities, but you know he will.- Dusted Magazine
- Posted Feb 28, 2018
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Tizita, like Lala Belu as a whole, feels like both a victory lap and the beginning of something new. It will be exciting to see what, at 71 years young, Mergia does next.- Dusted Magazine
- Posted Feb 23, 2018
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- Critic Score
She hasn’t lost anything, just slipped her message into an unusually sleek, attractive covering where we might not have been looking for it.- Dusted Magazine
- Posted Feb 21, 2018
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- Critic Score
In 2018 few singers could convincingly build a career as the next great crooner and William’s gambit to do that sometimes sacrifices the effectiveness of the songs, especially on those that serve his voice over craft. But when songwriting matches the talent of his voice the songs coalesce, and the results are spectacular.- Dusted Magazine
- Posted Feb 21, 2018
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The result is a melding of energies that is both fragilely beautiful and extraordinarily resilient.- Dusted Magazine
- Posted Feb 15, 2018
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In Messes, I’m hearing plenty of scrappy, sardonic, guitar-slashing indie rock--“Spotted Gold” stands out--but also other things. Chura’s voice gains clarity and sophistication on the slower songs.- Dusted Magazine
- Posted Feb 2, 2018
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Drones and feedback accumulate, intensify, and the whole thing threatens to collapse or combust. It does neither. ... Menuck’s difficult record is clearly a post-Trump artwork, a soundtrack for outrage fatigue. Its odd power raises questions.- Dusted Magazine
- Posted Feb 2, 2018
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