Pitchfork's Scores
- Music
For 12,704 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: 10,441 out of 12704
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Mixed: 1,949 out of 12704
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Negative: 314 out of 12704
12704
music
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Critic Score
Palo Santo is a promising sophomore album because it evolves past the sound of the band’s debut. But at its low points, the record lacks the bite to drive home the razor’s-edge duality of sacred and profane that Alexander seems to thrive on.- Pitchfork
- Posted Jul 9, 2018
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Welch sounds content and resigned, recollecting the stormy Saturdays of the past with a Sunday-morning penitent’s shrug and a born-again sigh. How small, how beige, how disappointing.- Pitchfork
- Posted Jul 5, 2018
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On Sixth House, by embracing the spirit of their best records without leaning on those releases’ do-or-die, hard-luck intensity, they’ve found a way to settle comfortably into their strengths.- Pitchfork
- Posted Jul 3, 2018
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I’m All Ears renders flattened communication as poignant, striking not because of the novelty of being made by teenagers but because it speaks with such commanding precision to the experience of a teenager in 2018.- Pitchfork
- Posted Jul 3, 2018
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- Pitchfork
- Posted Jul 2, 2018
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Themes for Television’s highlights effectively double as a showcase for Jewel’s impressive sense of arrangement and mood-setting.- Pitchfork
- Posted Jul 2, 2018
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A triumphant counterpoint [to YOL2]--a record that feels like pure, reckless release.- Pitchfork
- Posted Jul 2, 2018
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All the Things may only mark the first step in the Milk Carton Kids’ transformation--but, in eliminating so many of the constraints they once placed on their music, they have already crafted the richest, most accessible songs of their career.- Pitchfork
- Posted Jul 2, 2018
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It can give you new respect for the rigor, compression, and balance of some of his other albums from the period. It is at times, as Coltrane’s son Ravi pointed out, surprisingly like a live session in a studio; parts of the music sound geared toward a captive audience. That may be the best thing about it.- Pitchfork
- Posted Jul 2, 2018
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It’s remarkable how many of Scorpion’s 90 minutes are musically engaging. But the kind of juvenile navel-gazing that leads someone to write a line like, “She say do you love me, I tell her only partly/I only love my bed and my mama, I’m sorry” is less compelling when it’s coming from a 31-year-old father than a would-be college kid trying to make a name for himself.- Pitchfork
- Posted Jul 2, 2018
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In reaching out to others, Georgopoulos is discovering his own voice for the first time.- Pitchfork
- Posted Jun 29, 2018
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Its intentions are noble. Yet the album’s sentiments are often bogged down by cloying lyrics and worn-out arrangements. At times, the music feels conspicuously out of character for a band that has historically made tactful, if occasionally bland, rock’n’roll.- Pitchfork
- Posted Jun 29, 2018
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It might be too humble for its own good, but The Now Now is the rare commercial sojourn that feels like a product of real fascination.- Pitchfork
- Posted Jun 29, 2018
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An M-80 blown up in an empty clearing--explosive, fun as hell, but lacking a clear target to give it meaning.- Pitchfork
- Posted Jun 28, 2018
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Wet Will Always Dry is tender, intense, and dramatic. But most of all it is fun, in a way that only the pursuit of the most ludicrous aural stimulation can be.- Pitchfork
- Posted Jun 27, 2018
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- Pitchfork
- Posted Jun 27, 2018
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While the album’s open-endedness largely works to its benefit, Collagically Speaking occasionally meanders.- Pitchfork
- Posted Jun 25, 2018
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In his raps, Jay Rock can come off as a reclusive hard-liner with a remarkable storyteller’s acumen and an internal logic that always feels sound. Few gangsta rappers are better at illustrating just how limited their options were and how undaunted they had to be to overcome them.- Pitchfork
- Posted Jun 25, 2018
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For all its lavish instrumentation and weighty subtext, however, Babelsberg never overwhelms Rhys’ preternatural gift for writing swoon-worthy melodies.- Pitchfork
- Posted Jun 25, 2018
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Throughout Post Traumatic, you can sense how unmoored Shinoda is without that spectacle. His chest doesn’t puff out as far as it did on Fort Minor. His compositions don’t detonate like his best work for Linkin Park. His bandmates aren’t there to lift him up when he falls short. He sounds abandoned.- Pitchfork
- Posted Jun 25, 2018
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Kazuashita ends up saccharine and pompous, like music designed to soundtrack bad wildlife documentaries. Thankfully, these missteps are rare on an album that proves Gang Gang Dance aren’t so much of the moment as of a different moment, an alternative and rather more pleasant one.- Pitchfork
- Posted Jun 25, 2018
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A sense of cosmic ambiguity permeates Bad Witch. These are neither his most inviting new songs nor his most immediate, but they rank among his most urgent.- Pitchfork
- Posted Jun 25, 2018
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Part Three sounds much better. The songs are more linear and of a piece: dank bop compositions that often gnarl up in the middle and leave no room for extended solos. The pace and form of their songs no longer springs from jams, and there’s new tension and spacing to show for it.- Pitchfork
- Posted Jun 22, 2018
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Washington’s strengths have never been clearer. His sound is sinewy and centered, his rhythmic footing sure. And he’s a catharsis engine who also knows when to shrewdly dial it back.- Pitchfork
- Posted Jun 22, 2018
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They continually refined their punk-meets-post-rock sound and consistently moved with ease between loud chaos and contemplative quiet. The songwriting on Sorpresa Familia suggests a similar trajectory for Mourn. If they could survive label hell to make a record like this, who knows what they’ll be capable of next time around.- Pitchfork
- Posted Jun 21, 2018
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The album is so densely packed that it’s easy to miss Marr’s overarching themes, a shame exacerbated by his habitual neglect to draw attention to his lyrics. A pleasantly flat, unassuming singer, he functions mostly as a conduit for his melodies, which is only a detriment on an album with so much potential thematic resonance.- Pitchfork
- Posted Jun 21, 2018
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The writing is so meandering and mechanical that little here feels intentional, even the gaps. And strangely, that’s the bittersweet takeaway: Nas the meticulous observer has been supplanted by Nas the nervous rambler. It doesn’t feel like an accident.- Pitchfork
- Posted Jun 20, 2018
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Bon Voyage celebrates the catharsis of clearing away old wreckage, but it also revels in replacing that mess with new toys.- Pitchfork
- Posted Jun 20, 2018
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Like Elaenia, Nothing Is Still invites the listener recalibrate their expectations of the artist behind it. Vynehall is more than a producer with a great ear for texture and a nostalgic streak--he’s a storyteller, one who demands and merits our full attention.- Pitchfork
- Posted Jun 20, 2018
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These ["Maria," "Sick of Sittin’" and "Fall in Line"] are sturdy moments on an album that feels less like an end in itself than a promising first step toward a genuine pop rebirth—moments that are strong enough to inspire hope for Aguilera’s own The Velvet Rope or, at least, My Love Is Your Love. She has certainly still got the range.- Pitchfork
- Posted Jun 20, 2018
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