Exclaim's Scores
- Music
For 5,096 reviews, this publication has graded:
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57% higher than the average critic
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5% same as the average critic
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38% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 2 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Music review score: 75
| Highest review score: | Vol.II | |
|---|---|---|
| Lowest review score: | California Son |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 4,315 out of 5096
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Mixed: 753 out of 5096
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Negative: 28 out of 5096
5096
music
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Critic Score
Wherever he goes, it's a journey solely for himself. That we're invited occasionally to check on his progress in all its disarming, emotional breadth is simply a blessing.- Exclaim
- Posted Sep 27, 2024
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Sparhawk's plastic electronics are less invasive but still serve to create a new reality, sublimating the sadness and anger to a degree where they are less raw and more manageable.- Exclaim
- Posted Sep 25, 2024
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If it was offensively bad, at least it'd be camp. Instead, each track is an ADHD simulation — so understimulating you forget what it sounds like seconds after it ends.- Exclaim
- Posted Sep 23, 2024
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For some listeners, these lyrics might strike as free association, but there's a coherent logic to be traced from one line to the next, and strong thematic ground to be established as Menuck makes an important connection between the privatized experiences of the domestic space and that of the globally conscious citizen.- Exclaim
- Posted Sep 18, 2024
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Nearly a decade on, Jamie xx proves he still has the X factor. It was worth the wait.- Exclaim
- Posted Sep 18, 2024
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If there was ever any acquiescence to the particularities of one or another mode of creation on the part of Davachi, The Head as Form'd in the Crier's Choir is a sign that that is now over, and that she's freed herself to fully embrace the impulses that have made her work so rewarding all along.- Exclaim
- Posted Sep 13, 2024
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There's a sophistication to the vocal phrasing on "Call It Love" and "Made Out of Memory," a newfound confidence that alone is enough to propel My Method Actor to heights not frequently reached on past albums.- Exclaim
- Posted Sep 13, 2024
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From the lonesome synth pop of 2016's Pool and 2018's The House to 2020's hyper-Auto-Tuned Ricky Music to the freewheeling indie rock of All Day Gentle Hold ! — Shirt is an intoxicating feat.- Exclaim
- Posted Sep 12, 2024
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Sensual and honest, Viva Hinds feels close to the chest, with throbbing pianos, soaring synthesizers, and drum machines accompanying profound reflections on staying true to oneself in love.- Exclaim
- Posted Sep 10, 2024
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There are no more ghosts in these guitar solos, and the wiry licks and riffs are as sure-footed and confident as the tightly crafted structure of each song. It's easy listening, yet fiercely complex.- Exclaim
- Posted Sep 5, 2024
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The return to a more electronic-based production style is a welcome homecoming, allowing every pluck of the guitar and gentle synth stroke to speak for itself. Infinite Health is medicinal music for the soul. Santé!- Exclaim
- Posted Sep 3, 2024
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Although there are outliers (particularly "Final Rescue Attempt" and "Conversion"), for the most part, the album revels in its own straightforwardness, and the band makes it sound effortless.- Exclaim
- Posted Aug 30, 2024
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Though Short n' Sweet falls a few inches short of the masterful pop its singles suggested it could be, it's buoyed up by its incredibly high highs, and establishes Carpenter's identity in a pop landscape saturated with next-main-pop-girl hopefuls.- Exclaim
- Posted Aug 28, 2024
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The piece has a propulsive quality, even if it isn't travelling at a danceable BPM, and at 41 minutes, it never lags. It's also very listenable, its infinite aural nuances — blips and bloops, pounds and crackles, hisses and animal sounds — offering a constant source of delight, calm and exploration.- Exclaim
- Posted Aug 27, 2024
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[Producer John Congleton's] keen ear helps make POWER Tudzin's most sonically complex album, with electric and acoustic guitars, keyboards, strings, crescendos of feedback and other sounds subtly layered just beneath her bright vocals.- Exclaim
- Posted Aug 23, 2024
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This is no elementary Valentine's card; it's a treacherous and wonderfully unreliable encyclopedia of romance.- Exclaim
- Posted Aug 21, 2024
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Creativity is what keeps Ill Times pretty damn fun despite its darkness. While soul-meets-rock can easily slide into awkward pastiche, the synergy behind this collaboration keeps its collage of free-floating ideas tight, yet effortlessly unrestricted.- Exclaim
- Posted Aug 20, 2024
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FOREVER sees Charly Bliss firmly planting roots for themselves within the pop sphere with a sense of purpose and playful, joyous intention that even well-seasoned pop bands struggle to do.- Exclaim
- Posted Aug 20, 2024
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If only he'd overcome his demons, finished these fine songs and enjoyed the accolades they surely would have garnered. Justin Townes Earle fans were robbed of that deserved future, but at least we can make do with this collection of songs that bookends an exceptional career that should have gone on so much longer.- Exclaim
- Posted Aug 15, 2024
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Bird's Eye is tinged with her signature futuristic nostalgia, but her sonic and personal growth is clear, creating a vibrant kaleidoscope of sound and feeling.- Exclaim
- Posted Aug 9, 2024
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Y2K! certainly isn't a disaster, but it's decidedly inessential, providing some new material for fans of her early singles without revealing any new tricks.- Exclaim
- Posted Jul 26, 2024
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The story goes that Alabama red clay sticks around, its residue leaving a stubborn, permanent presence. The Red Clay Strays are here to stay, their story written in a cloud of red dust that's far from ready to settle.- Exclaim
- Posted Jul 25, 2024
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Glover is clearly better than he's ever been in almost every regard; his rapping, singing and everything in between feel refined to a point they never have. The issue is that, without the movie, there's no connective tissue between these songs, as great as the majority are. For now, Bando Stone & the New World exists as a collection of songs that are mostly great, but lack any real sense of cohesion between them.- Exclaim
- Posted Jul 24, 2024
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NO NAME isn't quite as white-knuckled as the first time White made music like this, nor is it as hooky as those White Stripes songs that took them from underground weirdos to superstars. But it's exciting to hear White fully return to the sound he's best known for, with its no-nonsense execution heightened by the thrilling manner in which it was released.- Exclaim
- Posted Jul 22, 2024
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Inoffensive music Iike this is an affront to the very idea of what makes music so worthy of obsession and analysis. It's the antithesis of self-expression; this ain't no victimless crime. For the first time, I understand the term: this is pure co-worker music.- Exclaim
- Posted Jul 22, 2024
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David's voice still sounds boyish after all these years, but All Hell noticeably showcases his increased range. Call it getting older, but it makes these songs that much more dynamic.- Exclaim
- Posted Jul 18, 2024
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Longtime fans should recognize Lady on the Cusp as a strong late-career addition to of Montreal's vast discography, mainly due to Barnes's larger-than-life persona. But you can only be the horniest freak at the party for so long before it starts to get old.- Exclaim
- Posted Jul 17, 2024
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While the majority of Harmonics was written solely by Goddard himself, he allows his songwriting to be elastic, bending and shaping around these guest vocalists, resulting in one of the most personality-filled albums of the year.- Exclaim
- Posted Jul 12, 2024
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Wolf sounds like she's having the time of her life showcasing her range as a vocalist and songwriter.- Exclaim
- Posted Jul 11, 2024
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Her experiments with cross-stitching sometimes unravel, but even the loose ends make for powerful listens.- Exclaim
- Posted Jul 11, 2024
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