Pitchfork's Scores
- Music
For 12,713 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: 10,450 out of 12713
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Mixed: 1,949 out of 12713
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Negative: 314 out of 12713
12713
music
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Critic Score
Everything rolls along like it’s actually going somewhere—not a flatulent dubstep waddle, but an aerodynamic gallop that brings to mind a deeper lineage of loud and obnoxious dance music, from the technical end of drum’n’bass to “proper” dubstep, Northern bassline, and Chicago juke.- Pitchfork
- Posted Feb 22, 2023
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- Pitchfork
- Posted Feb 16, 2023
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You have to bristle and tug at it to get past the barbed wire around these recordings, but once you do, you’re immersed in a surprisingly detailed and evocative world, just beyond the limits of rock.- Pitchfork
- Posted Feb 16, 2023
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These are love songs to a community and a lineage that taught Paul how to survive.- Pitchfork
- Posted Feb 16, 2023
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Continuing the trend of 2018’s King of Cowards and 2020’s Viscerals, Land of Sleeper feels a shade crisper than what came before. Whereas they once prioritised the churn and burn, now their songs are leaner and tighter.- Pitchfork
- Posted Feb 16, 2023
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If you come to Girl in the Half Pearl looking to find a soothing voice in the wilderness, you will instead find a complex maze of battered beats and warped shouts. The gripping soundscape doesn’t allow you to watch its protagonist’s transformation from the safety of the back row—it shoves you through the screen.- Pitchfork
- Posted Feb 14, 2023
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His eighth album, Norm, is his most meticulous and beguiling, straying from his semi-autobiographical past work to span three perspectives and tactfully downplaying its philosophical quandaries with his lushest arrangements to date.- Pitchfork
- Posted Feb 14, 2023
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Breaking the Balls of History has a blurry quality: a jumble of all-too-familiar thoughts that never add up to a breakthrough.- Pitchfork
- Posted Feb 14, 2023
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The album’s production veers from trip-hop to new wave, trance to flamenco, demonstrating an innate understanding of the pop archive in pursuit of a new personal style. Each creation seems marvelously its own.- Pitchfork
- Posted Feb 14, 2023
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Against the stately hush of Moore’s voice, Riley’s bass thunks satisfyingly, and their songs groove harder than ever. Warbled and muffled pianos contrast with acoustic guitars, and a few zany synth choices set Moore up to knock out some vocal delights.- Pitchfork
- Posted Feb 13, 2023
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elela’s music is hydration for the soul, seductive and relatable even as she continues to refine and evolve her sound. You can be drawn in by Raven’s all-encompassing atmosphere, but it’s even better to lose your whole self in it.- Pitchfork
- Posted Feb 13, 2023
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While the jagged edges of “This Is Why” establish a jittery energy to match Williams’ punctuated belting on the chorus, songs like “C’est Comme Ça” draw too closely from their inspirations. ... Once they shake off their millennial discontents, Paramore find their groove in the record’s second half.- Pitchfork
- Posted Feb 10, 2023
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The wider canvas and broadened palette reveal the complex human emotions within War’s music, resulting in a breakup record that’s emotionally resonant and curiously hopeful.- Pitchfork
- Posted Feb 8, 2023
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This Stupid World is just a particularly timely chapter in the modest saga of indie rock’s most unassuming institution. Its songs capture not only the darkness so many of us feel with each waking day but also the impulse to keep waking, to keep going.- Pitchfork
- Posted Feb 8, 2023
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The album is lush and oblique—an approachable standout in two daunting catalogs.- Pitchfork
- Posted Feb 8, 2023
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The songs sound as fresh as morning air through open kitchen windows.- Pitchfork
- Posted Feb 8, 2023
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While it showcases the breadth and the peaks of her capabilities, My 21st Century Blues lacks a clear thematic throughline.- Pitchfork
- Posted Feb 8, 2023
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Rush!, their first album recorded mainly in English, is absolutely terrible at every conceivable level: vocally grating, lyrically unimaginative, and musically one-dimensional. It is a rock album that sounds worse the louder you play it.- Pitchfork
- Posted Feb 7, 2023
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Gaze into Smalltown Stardust’s airy arrangements and you might see a reverse image of previous King Tuff records. That was music made for the cold dark of night, or at least a dimly curtained bedroom; this is music made to be heard in the reassuring glow of sunshine.- Pitchfork
- Posted Feb 7, 2023
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Heavy Heavy sweeps its listener along, churchlike, and conveys the feeling that resisting the urge will always feel worse than rising up and pushing the air from your lungs. And then, after a brief 10 tracks, it’s all over—as if the procession has marched on, out of earshot. But the invite is still there extended: It’s up to you whether to accept it or not.- Pitchfork
- Posted Feb 7, 2023
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New York City is less a reflection of the sanitized, hyper-gentrified New York of today than a reaction against it—sneering from the paint-peeling dive bars, flipping off the real-estate vultures, and summoning the snottiest ghosts of the city’s punk past.- Pitchfork
- Posted Feb 6, 2023
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Dancehall is a singles-driven genre, but Popcaan often shines in the album format, so it’s regrettable that many of these 17 songs feel so lackluster. For a genre rooted in joy and conviviality, the letdown is hard to ignore.- Pitchfork
- Posted Feb 6, 2023
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Those looking for Graham from Blur will find it in his laconic vocal turns and occasional guitar explosions, while Dougall’s dreamily dejected melodies will resonate with fans of her solo work. But The WAEVE has its own chemistry, an alchemic mixture of psych, punk, folk, tenderness, and dread, laced with dextrous saxophone tones and a few come-hither drops of terror.- Pitchfork
- Posted Feb 6, 2023
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Refining the sprawling sound of Souvenir, Portrait of a Dog is produced entirely by the Toronto group BADBADNOTGOOD, encasing Yano’s melancholy lyrics and tranquil guitar playing in a more casual environment and giving the album a meditative, inviting tone.- Pitchfork
- Posted Feb 3, 2023
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Twain’s team of co-writers and producers have past credits with Halsey, Justin Bieber, Pitbull, Fred again.., and Iggy Azalea, and too often the material they’ve assembled for Twain feels like third-tier scraps intended for other clients. Queen of Me’s bland and plasticine arrangements are a far cry from the energy and sizzle of hits like “That Don’t Impress Me Much” and “Man! I Feel Like a Woman.”- Pitchfork
- Posted Feb 3, 2023
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Dead Meat’s sound may be a throwback, but it’s so tunefully crafted that it charms the way it did the first time around.- Pitchfork
- Posted Feb 1, 2023
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It speaks to Baird’s ever-expanding ethos that, after 20 years of eager, in-depth collaboration, she’s managed to sound more like herself than ever.- Pitchfork
- Posted Feb 1, 2023
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It’s all so easy to digest, so pitch-perfect, so safe. Let’s Start Here. clearly and badly wants to be hanging up on those dorm room walls with Currents and Blonde and IGOR.- Pitchfork
- Posted Feb 1, 2023
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Cyclamen’s ruminative moments work in tandem with its daydreamy instrumentation, a balancing act Graham extends to the album’s most transcendent songs.- Pitchfork
- Posted Jan 31, 2023
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On We Cater to Cowards, Oozing Wound have downsized to a smaller ride, but they’ve filled the tank with rocket fuel, and they’ve never sounded more comfortable behind the wheel.- Pitchfork
- Posted Jan 31, 2023
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