Pitchfork's Scores
- Music
For 12,715 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: 10,452 out of 12715
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Mixed: 1,949 out of 12715
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Negative: 314 out of 12715
12715
music
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Critic Score
Muldrow and Perkins root their work in the present by paying homage to the sound and radical spirit of their West Coast home.- Pitchfork
- Posted Aug 15, 2019
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Shura is at her most convincing, and her most alive, when she’s fully embodying her own experience rather than narrating someone else’s.- Pitchfork
- Posted Aug 15, 2019
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This Is Not a Safe Place is not, in the end, the classic Ride Mark 2 release that its first three songs so casually tease. But it has enough joy, verve and invention to suggest that Ride could get there one day.- Pitchfork
- Posted Aug 15, 2019
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Too often on Port of Miami 2, he locks into the flow of least resistance and simply lets it ride, hiding behind his production instead of asserting his dominion over it. And while his music remains sumptuous as always, that luster alone is no longer enough to wow.- Pitchfork
- Posted Aug 14, 2019
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For better or for worse, Kind is a Slipknot record, one that has more to offer than expected and is still sometimes frustratingly short-sighted.- Pitchfork
- Posted Aug 14, 2019
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Despite the glossy guestlist, The Lost Boy remains Cordae’s show. At 15 songs, it could have used an edit, another voice in the room telling him to tone it down. But still, it’s an assured debut.- Pitchfork
- Posted Aug 12, 2019
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Certainly, there’s a few corny or dated moments—listening through Care Package, you’ll hear hashtag rap (“I got that Courtney Love for you/Crazy shit”), epically cloying vocal runs, and overly cutesy wordplay like, “Brunch with Qatar royals all my cups is oil.” However, the best songs here stand up with Drake’s best music.- Pitchfork
- Posted Aug 12, 2019
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The resulting collection of cavernous electro-rock, elaborately adorned psych-pop, and winsome ambient-folk is polished and professional-sounding, but it’s also as tedious and unmemorable as the group’s name. There are glimmers of promise.- Pitchfork
- Posted Aug 12, 2019
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There are a few dull moments, like “Conventional Ride,” which explores how it feels to be the object of other people’s sexual curiosity. ... Any Human Friend reaches its high point with the quietest song.- Pitchfork
- Posted Aug 12, 2019
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While unassuming on paper, there’s something about Possible Humans’ music that sticks; there are hooks hidden in these songs, obscured by Macfarlane’s production but present enough that you might hum them after even a passive listen.- Pitchfork
- Posted Aug 9, 2019
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Vernon himself sings with more texture and conviction than ever before. He’s shifted fully from vessel to commander, steering the music instead of seeping into it.- Pitchfork
- Posted Aug 9, 2019
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On Live at Troxy, we get the chance to hear Fever Ray—a band, now—exalt all of that good human love as a collective, a chosen family thrilled to share their music and their play.- Pitchfork
- Posted Aug 7, 2019
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WHY? has never been a subtle band, but they’ve also never been this overwrought.- Pitchfork
- Posted Aug 7, 2019
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At its best, Blume is a testament to the rich aesthetic diversity of London’s jazz scene.- Pitchfork
- Posted Aug 6, 2019
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The album is stacked with cartoonish approximations of what she thinks a rap song should sound like: shivers of bass, the occasional “skrrrt,” Mad Libs of designer brands and bodily fluids. Many sound like direct imitations of the rappers she admires.- Pitchfork
- Posted Aug 5, 2019
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With Caligula, she has created a murderous amalgam of opera, metal, and noise that uses her classical training like a Trojan Horse, burning misogyny to ash from its Judeo-Christian roots.- Pitchfork
- Posted Aug 5, 2019
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At times GUV I can feel like indie rock cosplay, especially coming from a shapeshifter like Cook. When an artist genre-hops with such agility and totality, with titles and performances as goofy as Young Guv’s can be, it’s harder to lose yourself in the familiar comforts of a fuzz pedal and a charmingly off-key vocal. Even so, there’s an ease to the mimicry.- Pitchfork
- Posted Aug 5, 2019
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Stuart Duncan’s fiddle reinforces the small-town details of “Matthew,” about simply trying to make ends meet while enjoying a little bit of joy in between the trials. That’s a theme common to country and folk music, yet on Country Squire Childers invests it with enough insight and immediacy to make those hardships sound perfectly present tense.- Pitchfork
- Posted Aug 5, 2019
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First Taste is sharply paced, sequenced for maximum impact as two separate vinyl sides but also effective as a seamless 41-minute listen. ... If the songs don’t linger as long as the sound, chalk that up to Segall being a “first idea, best idea” kind of guy. This time, he concentrated on production. Maybe next time around, he’ll turn his attention to the tunes.- Pitchfork
- Posted Aug 5, 2019
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The one negative of this project is its inaccessibility. Rhino only manufactured 1,969 box sets; each one retails at $799.98, and there are no plans to make the 38-disc version available on streaming services. For those with smaller budgets, the 10xCD version is still worthwhile. ... What the 38-disc box set succeeds at is not just righting the record, or presenting a mammoth set of live songs, but in creating an environment that effectively transports the listener to that muddy pasture in upstate New York.- Pitchfork
- Posted Aug 2, 2019
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Few verses on the album are particularly memorable outside of spots from Maxo Kream, Vince Staples, a string of appearances from the consistently good J.I.D, and the standalone moments of introspection from J. Cole himself. But the comp works because it never feels forced or closed off to ideas.- Pitchfork
- Posted Aug 2, 2019
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Like all of neo soul’s greats, BJ seamlessly blurs R&B’s past and present, but 1123 tends to sidestep the most obvious tropes, both modern and retro. ... In its final stretch, though, 1123 does toss out a few of-the-moment tracks that radio might be able to work with.- Pitchfork
- Posted Aug 2, 2019
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K.R.I.T. Iz Here captures K.R.I.T. the same as he always is: perfectly likable, admirably sincere, predictably dependable and dependably predictable.- Pitchfork
- Posted Aug 2, 2019
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The uptempo tracks are breezy and chill; the ballads are lush and deeply felt.- Pitchfork
- Posted Aug 2, 2019
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The record is expertly mixed and produced: It brims with fully realized moments, like a synth bit on “Anxious” that conjures the exact feeling of seeing an ex like someone else’s post on Instagram; the portamentos on “Slow Burn” should come with a vertigo warning. But the album’s mood is just sour.- Pitchfork
- Posted Aug 1, 2019
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This is no garden-variety chill. It’s lush and heady, and shot through with an undercurrent of wistful contemplation, but none of it sounds like an exercise in presets, whether musical or emotional.- Pitchfork
- Posted Aug 1, 2019
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Like Punken before it, Brandon Banks is a major leap in craft and style as well as refinement of his self-image.- Pitchfork
- Posted Aug 1, 2019
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Remembering the Rockets is everything one might expect from an ambitious, reverent band moving to the epicenter of American indie rock: It’s sharper and more purposeful, forged by the pressure of real expectations. The best album of their deep and underappreciated catalog, it also imagines a life after indie rock.- Pitchfork
- Posted Aug 1, 2019
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- Pitchfork
- Posted Aug 1, 2019
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Over the course of 13 songs, though, Dude York wind up mimicking their idols as opposed to referencing them.- Pitchfork
- Posted Aug 1, 2019
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