Pitchfork's Scores
- Music
For 12,726 reviews, this publication has graded:
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41% higher than the average critic
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6% same as the average critic
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53% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 2.8 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Music review score: 70
| Highest review score: | Sign O' the Times [Deluxe Edition] | |
|---|---|---|
| Lowest review score: | nyc ghosts & flowers |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 10,462 out of 12726
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Mixed: 1,950 out of 12726
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Negative: 314 out of 12726
12726
music
reviews
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- Critic Score
While they’re not radically altering their own musical DNA, they are still in their own way trying to figure out what they can and cannot do. While that probably sounds like a backhanded compliment for these rock‘n’roll veterans, it might actually be the secret to their longevity.- Pitchfork
- Posted Jan 16, 2018
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The high points of the album are the tracks that feature Todd by herself either on guitar or piano, filling the song with the trembling strength of her singing.- Pitchfork
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There’s nothing wrong with creating a club LP, but when you stack it up against TJM’s other, more adventurous albums, the consistency can’t help but drag.- Pitchfork
- Posted Sep 27, 2019
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Like all the best shoegaze records, Agitprop Alterna is a heady, inward-looking listen. But if you’re able to zone out, or simply to begin walking with no destination in mind, its oversized and introspective ideas make welcome company.- Pitchfork
- Posted Apr 27, 2020
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“Mr. Solo Dolo III” is only memorable because of its title, which like too much of Man on the Moon III is coasting on a legacy built a lifetime ago.- Pitchfork
- Posted Dec 16, 2020
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Even when Beer herself sounds lovely, her explorations of vulnerability and self-definition tangle in stiff, obvious metaphors. The writing relies on flimsy framing devices, shoehorning a delicate narrative about hiding and healing into simplistic slogans.- Pitchfork
- Posted Mar 5, 2021
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Even those who decided years ago that this album was going to be great will be hard-pressed to find a great rap record here, only a sporadically enjoyable one.- Pitchfork
- Posted Mar 10, 2015
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Walker’s idiosyncratic take is his way of reconnecting the celebrated, cerebral art-folkie he’s become with a past spent dodging beanbags and sucking down Natty Lights in an East Troy parking lot. If you hear a little bit of your own journey in there, hey, all the better.- Pitchfork
- Posted Nov 26, 2018
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A great deal of Death Set's charm lies in how their toothsome double-guitar attack is deliberately undermined by their tinkertoy beats and new-waved keys; when the band try to overcompensate with the aggro.- Pitchfork
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Cloudy and labyrinthine at times, airy and placid elsewhere, People cuts a pretty wide swath, an approach that feels a bit more mature and confident than the bending over backwards he sometimes had to do to reach the disparate genres on his earlier solo records.- Pitchfork
- Posted Oct 25, 2011
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Ultimately, Avonmore is a fine addition to Bryan Ferry’s oeuvre, if not necessarily a terribly challenging one.- Pitchfork
- Posted Nov 19, 2014
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You’re Welcome feels stale, dried of both new inspiration or improvisational allure.- Pitchfork
- Posted May 24, 2017
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Despite the band name, the album is a guitar-driven record, relying primarily on Stillman's dexterous fretwork to lead the quintet in and out of geometric jams that sound vaguely prog-metal in origin.- Pitchfork
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As a benefit for earthquake victims and as an outlet for Batoh's grief and fear, there's plenty to recommend. As a pure sonic experience, it is a very novel, very undeveloped idea mingling with some very old ones.- Pitchfork
- Posted Mar 30, 2012
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Direct Hits proves the Killers have fewer actual hits, let alone great ones, than you thought and makes you wonder if they made their Greatest Hits album too early or whether they can ever legitimately put one together at all.- Pitchfork
- Posted Nov 21, 2013
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Though solidly enjoyable, Electric Lines could have benefitted from some more concretely original ideas to propel it forward. But when Goddard taps into his love for house, disco, and techno, his enthusiasm radiates through the speakers.- Pitchfork
- Posted Apr 17, 2017
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Songs for Sinners and Saints doesn’t cover as much ground as Michael, which offered the rich multi-genre sprawl of a classic Dungeon Family release. But the narrower palette and lower stakes of the project restore the focus and play of his “Snappin’ & Trappin” days.- Pitchfork
- Posted Aug 7, 2024
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In opener “Freedom.” Kesha fugues over twinkling piano and synths, singing “I’ve been waiting for you/Everything’s changed now.” But the simmering disco bass and house-gleaned aesthetics suggest a much more powerful mission statement, and the song devolves into middling party-pop.- Pitchfork
- Posted Jul 8, 2025
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The good news about The Digging Remedy is that it’s lovely and listenable for any longtime followers, or for anyone remotely interested in the kind of melodic IDM defined by this piece. However, it is neither an exciting deviation nor a refinement; as such, it’s really just more of an already-good thing, albeit packaged less delicately.- Pitchfork
- Posted Jun 17, 2016
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Considering how he and White have a past history of collaborating, you'd think that Guilty Simpson and White would be firing on all cylinders by now; instead, the Detroit hardhead unfurls cliché after cliché and drops vague, autobiographical teases that don't reveal much in particular.- Pitchfork
- Posted Sep 22, 2011
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Gentlemen's about as interesting as middling Pollard records get, but it's middling all the same, a fittingly abnormal end to a most unusual year.- Pitchfork
- Posted Dec 9, 2013
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As ardent and inviting as Something Shines and We Are Divine both are, Sadier seems content at this point to coo to the converted.- Pitchfork
- Posted Sep 24, 2014
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The quixotic charm wears thin as "Some Slender Rest" dips into lugubrious emo-folk, and the remainder of the album's murdered wives, enraged sheriffs, and luckless roustabouts pile up cartoonishly.- Pitchfork
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Nostalgia and intimacy suit Frahm’s compositional style, which relies on tugging at the heartstrings. But at times, the surfeit of feeling is overbearing.- Pitchfork
- Posted Dec 8, 2021
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Although Cordae can be an engaging writer, on songs like “Momma’s Hood” his delivery is as dry as a teenager forced to read in class. “Jean-Michel” shows his competence as a rapper, but the song sounds like it’s reaching to be a classic ’90s rap interlude and landing at a Big Sean freestyle from L.A. Leakers.- Pitchfork
- Posted Jan 21, 2022
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Robed in Rareness is ultimately a less significant Shabazz Palaces release, but there’s something fitting about a casually adventurous album by a vet dropping in the year of hip-hop’s 50th birthday. As the doomsayers look backward, Butler turns his gaze everywhere.- Pitchfork
- Posted Oct 31, 2023
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Pollock is clearly in her comfort zone here, both vocally and musically.- Pitchfork
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It's lively in its drowsiness, which may be the album's most compelling and distinguishing contrast.- Pitchfork
- Posted Oct 5, 2011
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It's easy to get the sense that the intent is to let the jangling shoegaze wash over you, and if some of the lyrics stick, that's fine. But that's the thing-- they rarely do, and neither do several of the songs.- Pitchfork
- Posted Apr 20, 2012
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The run of “Milkweed,” “Detritivore,” and “Aqaba” is quintessential Shearwater in both their titles and the tendency to let the middle of their albums coast by like a warm, welcome breeze.- Pitchfork
- Posted Jun 13, 2022
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