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
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Critic Score
Like so many debuts, Hats Off to the Buskers is ultimately a document of a band searching for their own voice in those of others.- Pitchfork
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Fortunately, Winehouse has been blessed by a brassy voice that can transform even mundane sentiments into powerful statements.- Pitchfork
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[The] Fratellis aren't so much the sound of young Britain as the sound of dad's old record collection.- Pitchfork
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Full of the kind of basic strum-alongs and diaristic musings that yield showers of Starbucks praise.- Pitchfork
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Hammond's solo outing is a spry if unexceptional pop charmer, less supercilious than Is This It or Room on Fire but almost as cool.- Pitchfork
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No longer experimenting for experimentation's sake, every beat-breaking decision on Myth Takes serves to reinforce the monumental rhythms.- Pitchfork
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Pocket Symphony winds up feeling strangely transient, accomplished and genuinely likeable but also forgettable.- Pitchfork
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Although they've expanded their sound, the Arcade Fire's transition into extroversion isn't always smooth or graceful. Neon Bible is full of clunky lyrics, revealing Butler's tendency to overstate and sensationalize.- Pitchfork
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Where his solo debut, Yr Atal Genhedlaeth, was a relatively subdued, Welsh-only affair, its successor takes unseriousness as seriously as any official Furries effort.- Pitchfork
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Where Folkloric Feel opted for cobwebby murk, National Anthem of Nowhere dovetails in bright, tidy corners. It's at once straight-laced and funky in the way that only indie rock can be.- Pitchfork
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A lot of Make Another World doesn't stick the way good guitar pop should.- Pitchfork
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It sadly turns out to be an unsettling piece of evidence that he's lost without someone else's pre-existing sounds to extrapolate from and transform.- Pitchfork
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Whether she's giving the rhythm section a cigarette break, trying to approximate the sound of an anesthetized New Pornographers, or adding the same sort of pseudo-dancey Casio flourishes that have colored her work since the first Azure Ray album, Taylor never fails to instill the same sense of inescapable inertia throughout.- Pitchfork
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In the end, what makes The Foley Room Tobin's best album in seven years is the way his bent for organized chaos manifests as a deft control of every sound that surrounds him: Anything's a beat, everything's a break, and the difference between sound and music is entirely contextual.- Pitchfork
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That the songs are essentially interchangeable 8-cylinder rawk is one thing; that they begin to clearly resemble the long-forgotten, acid-coated Eastern-revivalists Kula Shaker is something more distressing altogether.- Pitchfork
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Track by track, the disc's a sweet thing, but as a whole it's about as light and wispy.- Pitchfork
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Despite all the haunting vibes, woodwinds, and honeyed strings, rock music's guitar/bass/drums dynamic is dominant on Rust; it hovers between the rambunctious clatter of Broken Social Scene (which shares two members with DMST) and the elegant contortions of Jaga Jazzist.- Pitchfork
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If Dälek didn't have all this discordant float working for them, they'd be one of the most irritating rap groups in history.- Pitchfork
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A loose, warm, and human-scale record that sounds pretty nice right out of the gate.- Pitchfork
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Hold it by its edges and the experience of this album suffers––the rocky center is where we find personal truths writ well.- Pitchfork
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All of a Sudden I Miss Everyone is the musical equivalent of a late Woody Allen film (possibly a good or bad thing, depending on your temperament): The action unfolds predictably, but the dramatic effect can also be increased by your fondness for and familiarity with the idiom.- Pitchfork
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Atlantis strives for a patchwork cohesiveness, with equal parts neo-soul, reggae, rap, and rock, bound by a vaguely spiritual message and partially elaborated water-related extended metaphor.- Pitchfork
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An admirably cocksure debut on which Levi makes like a 21st century T. Rex-- which, our current retro-obsessed rock culture notwithstanding, is not an easy thing to pull off.- Pitchfork
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While there's nothing wrong with a predictable approach when deployed with expertise, it's disappointing from a band like the Frames.- Pitchfork
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Much of Numbers feels melancholy-by-numbers, so melodies seem recycled, riffs feel tedious, and the emotional register dampens.- Pitchfork
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It's an interesting middle ground the band reach here, touching upon many previous bases while not favoring entirely the guitar tomfoolery or the smirking electro-rock.- Pitchfork
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As good as the record sounds and as capably as he immerses himself in assorted flavors pop, there remains an odd sense of distance to Conn on record.- Pitchfork
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Swift's merry melodies and uninhibited sensitivity draw equally on the immaculate piano pop of Carole King's Tapestry and the strummy self-awareness of Jackson Browne's early Asylum Records releases, but it's his noticeable theatricality that sets him apart.- Pitchfork
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The Dark Horse shares [the debut's] deliberate sense of pacing, precious attention to detail and hermetic sound-world atmosphere; the difference here is that almost every song builds to a crucial moment where the Besnards bravely step out of the shadows, and in the process, transform from being a merely good band to a great one.- Pitchfork
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