Pitchfork's Scores
- Music
For 12,711 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: 10,448 out of 12711
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Mixed: 1,949 out of 12711
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Negative: 314 out of 12711
12711
music
reviews
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- Critic Score
SOS is a clear document of how extensively SZA has sharpened her songwriting since the exquisite CTRL, how she’s become an even more exacting lyricist and imaginative musician. While placing herself firmly in the tradition of R&B, she’s forcefully blasé about genre tropes.- Pitchfork
- Posted Dec 8, 2022
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If Willner doesn't hit at least some of your pleasure centers, well, forget your ears-- your nerve endings might actually be dead. Even three months in, it's a safe bet that From Here We Go Sublime will wind up 2007's most luxuriant record.- Pitchfork
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Summerteeth looms ominously in Wilco’s catalog, marking a point where he [Tweedy] knows it all could have gone wrong. He now sounds like a man who understands pop music will save his life. That quality makes the bonus material on this drinking-age-anniversary all the more potent.- Pitchfork
- Posted Nov 6, 2020
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Illinois is huge, a staggering collection of impeccably arranged American tribute songs.- Pitchfork
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This record is a return to the spare folk of Seven Swans, but with a decade's worth of honing and exploration packed into it. It already feels like his most classic and pure effort.- Pitchfork
- Posted Mar 30, 2015
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It’s hard to imagine a more vocally versatile pair than Lal and Mike, whose interplay adds depth to all of these moods.- Pitchfork
- Posted Aug 11, 2017
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On Jimmy Lee, Saadiq shout-sings, whispers, and croons with new abandon. It feels like a refutation of his old reserve, and it also represents a welcome stretch from Saadiq before he takes his sound all the way back to his beginnings.- Pitchfork
- Posted Sep 19, 2019
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The album has the particular aliveness of music being created and torn from a group at this very moment--tempered, but with the wild-paced abandon that comes with being caged and then free.- Pitchfork
- Posted Jan 20, 2015
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9th Wonder evolves with Rapsody here, perhaps out of necessity, as her raps continue to expand in force and scope. Alongside Eric G, Nottz, and Khrysis, the other in-house producers at his label, Wonder assists her in reaching new places.- Pitchfork
- Posted Aug 27, 2019
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Spell Blanket is an expansive sonic feast, swiftly—but intentionally—oscillating from minute-long loop fragments and textural studies to more fleshed-out, properly arranged songs. There’s a noticeable flow in energy, which gives the collection more of a proper album feel than a mixtape or thrown-together compilation.- Pitchfork
- Posted May 8, 2024
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An exhaustive presentation of Mitchell’s process in this era. Some of the recordings are so good that it’s difficult to understand how they sat in the vaults for this long. Others are brilliant, but close enough to the released versions that anyone with less than a scholarly interest in Mitchell would be better served by the official albums.- Pitchfork
- Posted Oct 17, 2023
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Her music never sounds alone. The record glows with this strange self-sufficiency, an instinct to push forward against bad odds.- Pitchfork
- Posted Jun 22, 2020
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Newbury conceived them specifically as a trilogy examining his own romantic past as well as the country's contentious history, and 40 years later, they sound just as imaginative, evocative, and emotional as ever.- Pitchfork
- Posted Jun 21, 2011
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It’s easy to class 1989 as an artistically lesser entry in Swift’s catalog, however counterintuitive to its success, but these songs are wildly durable. 1989 (Taylor’s Version) isn’t plastered with a debutante smile like its predecessor—but it certainly hasn’t lost its luster.- Pitchfork
- Posted Oct 30, 2023
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private music—like A Moon Shaped Pool and Fossora—is unlikely to draw in unconvinced listeners, but like those records, it shows them fully in control of their instantly recognizable sound, able to effortlessly bend it around whatever structures they put in its place.- Pitchfork
- Posted Aug 20, 2025
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This is an extraordinarily assured first offering from a young artist capable of surprising at every turn. The result is not so much a foreboding portrait of a forgotten, boom-and-bust city, but an invitation to a place and people unduly ignored—and an introduction to an artist who won’t be.- Pitchfork
- Posted Nov 17, 2020
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New York, New York is a significant artifact. The music and photographs capture the formative moments of punk and new wave, before those genres had been thoroughly defined.- Pitchfork
- Posted Nov 11, 2015
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Skinner has an obvious talent for forging damn sharp hip-pop hooks that supercede his inherent verbal handicap.- Pitchfork
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It’s a brief rush, at a hair over 27 minutes, but covers a remarkable amount of ground. And as a blueprint for a new, pan-African pop music, it is thoroughly convincing.- Pitchfork
- Posted Jan 3, 2025
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These are among some of the most surreal, existential, and fascinating songs of Mitski’s career, zooming out from the exigencies of her vocation to probe the essence of the human condition and our place in the cosmos.- Pitchfork
- Posted Sep 14, 2023
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This ungainly sprawl suits the Rolling Thunder Revue, which was meant not as a mere evening of entertainment but rather an immersive theatrical experience. ... The heart of the box sets lies in those five full concerts, all sharing the same basic momentum, all distinguished by passion. The vigor doesn’t belong to Dylan alone. The Guam band is unwieldy and enthusiastic, taking the time to let all their disparate voices mesh.- Pitchfork
- Posted Jun 13, 2019
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It’s hard to point to any weak points on black british music, but a few songs feel less distinct: the breezy Afropop of “S.O.S.” sounds a bit anonymous next to the rest of these songs (admittedly, it also sounds like a potential hit), while the submerged sound of “Tiger Driver ’91” veers uncomfortably close to Drake territory.- Pitchfork
- Posted Jul 18, 2025
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While the rest of pop culture infantilizes itself with cussing puppets and manufactured bands who willfully dangle like marionettes, Waits is serving up vintage brittle fusion and somehow breaking the law of diminishing returns. [Review of both Alice and Blood Money]- Pitchfork
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Even the least-crucial songs feature a tough backing band and a powerful, raspy performance from Candi.- Pitchfork
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Prince and the Revolution: Live is the culmination of months of tireless practice, a refined gem so filtered of imperfections you could hardly believe it came together in one take.- Pitchfork
- Posted Jun 30, 2022
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What distinguishes the recordings on The Time for Peace Is Now is how the passion of the singers is tempered by the professionalism of their supporting players. Everybody involved was attempting to appeal to a broad audience: They were converting doubters into believers by playing gospel that could masquerade as pop.- Pitchfork
- Posted Dec 19, 2019
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Her storytelling is masterful, filled with earnest lyricism and a knack for arresting imagery.- Pitchfork
- Posted May 31, 2023
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Much of More Blood, More Tracks elicits an eerie feeling, a dramatic feedback loop of Dylan’s shifting self-image. It’s not uncommon for the Bootleg Series to leave breadcrumb trails for fans, yet hearing Dylan obsess over these songs about obsession creates an uncanny Synecdoche, New York effect.- Pitchfork
- Posted Nov 7, 2018
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An album that’s intimate in mood no matter how expansive in sound. .... Generally, the alternate takes offer little more than subtle differences, such as the lack of Indian instrumentation during the middle section of “Living in the Material World,” but the pair of non-LP songs add a dose of good cheer that’s conspicuously lacking on the original album.- Pitchfork
- Posted Dec 2, 2024
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Glory is rich with beauty, but the band—Hadreas; longtime partner Alan Wyfells; producer Blake Mills; and drummers Tim Carr and Jim Keltner, bassist Pat Kelly, and guitarists Meg Duffy and Greg Uhlmann—twists it just enough to let in flashes of the strange and idiosyncratic.- Pitchfork
- Posted Mar 26, 2025
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