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
There are moments on Detroit 2 that feel special, but Big Sean himself rarely has anything to do with them.- Pitchfork
- Posted Sep 10, 2020
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On Help, his latest album, Timothy works with a number of collaborators from the London scene—Mr. Mitch, Vegyn, and Lil Silva to name a few—to create a piece of music that takes equally from modern jazz and UK bass. With their help, Timothy sings the song of a community that he carries within him, voicing their past oppressions even in his most abstract pieces. Timothy constructs a vast castle out of his reference points making music that feels filled with the spectres of the past.- Pitchfork
- Posted Sep 9, 2020
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Despite the wobbly sequencing and foggy structure, the album is a bright flare from a promising talent. McKenna doesn’t simply pay homage to his musical heroes; he jerry-rigs the history of British rock to ask how we got ourselves into this mess, and how the hell we might get out.- Pitchfork
- Posted Sep 9, 2020
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For the most part, Gilberto’s voice finds the pocket, and when she’s front and center, the arrangements expertly draped around her, Agora is a rapturous listen. It’s not the star’s finest work—for newcomers, 2000’s Tanto Tempo remains her most engaging set—but in a time of personal distress, Gilberto embraces the familiar comforts of her graceful sound.- Pitchfork
- Posted Sep 8, 2020
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Awake in the Brain Chamber is best when Curtis is at his most vulnerable—giving himself a pep talk in the call-and-response chorus of “Everything Starts,” muttering “I want to give up” all too believably throughout the chorus of “Talos’ Corpse,” before amending himself—“I want to give up, but don’t.” They sound like they have much more to give.- Pitchfork
- Posted Sep 8, 2020
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The album oscillates between emotional registers, balancing profound quiet with strummy, emphatic pleas about how we might better comport ourselves in the world; there’s a sense that even at their most gentle, these songs are transmitting something deeply earnest and hard-won. This is as true of Read’s lyrics as of her arrangements, which are newly rich and rewarding.- Pitchfork
- Posted Sep 8, 2020
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Bar the rare moments of clunky electronics, almost every sound, touch, and shade on Fall to Pieces feels like it had to be there, in blessed contrast to the rambling dead ends, failed experiments, and misjudged covers of Tricky’s recent records. Fall to Pieces is an audacious cri de coeur that ultimately finds strength in adversity where others might fall apart.- Pitchfork
- Posted Sep 8, 2020
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Loud isn’t their aim, and Plum’s special, big moments stand out against the quiet.- Pitchfork
- Posted Sep 4, 2020
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Gold Record captures both sides: The yen to collapse the spaces between people, and the acknowledgment that some spaces are too cold to cross.- Pitchfork
- Posted Sep 4, 2020
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From the driving blues line in “The Cowrie Waltz,” the lush soundscapes heard on “Ancestral Duckets” and “Bop for Aneho,” and the celestial soul claps that emanate from “Zane, The Scribe,” Georgia Anne Muldrow, once again, engenders her own Afrofuturistic realm, one that is heard, seen, and felt in the here and now.- Pitchfork
- Posted Sep 3, 2020
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Twenty-three-year-old Samia Finnerty’s debut album The Baby deals with “too much” in elegant ways, navigating the trappings of young adulthood with subtle, reflective songwriting and poetic lyrical beauty.- Pitchfork
- Posted Sep 3, 2020
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It may not rival his classic albums—and it never deludes itself into thinking it does—but Got To Be Tough captures Hibbert as committed as always, still giving it all he’s got.- Pitchfork
- Posted Sep 3, 2020
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Fun while it lasts, but somehow less than the sum of its parts.- Pitchfork
- Posted Sep 2, 2020
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Whole New Mess has a singular power. The songs are spare but still feel electric, and despite their lower volume compared to All Mirrors, you couldn’t necessarily call them quiet. Their slow-strummed chords and finger-picked patterns are at times deliberately brittle and blown-out. Whole New Mess amplifies a different source of loudness.- Pitchfork
- Posted Sep 1, 2020
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The album suffers from the same primary problem that plagued the original S&M: Metallica’s best songs, intricate and ambitious though they may be, are not actually well suited for the additional orchestrating they get here, precisely because they are plenty symphonic already.- Pitchfork
- Posted Sep 1, 2020
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For Owens, loops—both electronic and lyrical—are a grounding presence, like a chant uttered in a meditative state: a simple phrase or pattern that functions as a conduit to another world. With Inner Song, Owens seeks to take the listener to a place of healing, finding solace in the shelter of a repeated chord progression.- Pitchfork
- Posted Sep 1, 2020
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ENERGY is a manic attempt to relight the fire, as well as a confetti-strewn soundtrack for a world tour that never was.- Pitchfork
- Posted Aug 31, 2020
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Smile asks less of us. The confessions on this album feel like calculated dodges, every tepid disclosure immediately followed by triumph. ... Despite all her garbled platitudes, she remains a master at executing proven chart-topping formulas.- Pitchfork
- Posted Aug 28, 2020
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A shoegaze album with a rare scope and an even rarer sense of fun and imagination.- Pitchfork
- Posted Aug 27, 2020
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The new album marks a retreat into a nostalgia-act comfort zone—one which suits Nas, even as it yields diminishing returns.- Pitchfork
- Posted Aug 27, 2020
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Eno Axis is both a wonderful album and a handy instruction manual for our times: Follow the simple suggestions tucked within McEntire’s songs and you may just feel your weariness begin to lift like morning mist burning off a river.- Pitchfork
- Posted Aug 26, 2020
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It is one of the most intimate records in her catalog, and the entire band seems locked into the introspective intensity that marks her best songwriting.- Pitchfork
- Posted Aug 26, 2020
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Sella once stood out for a demeanor that was both wide-eyed and jaded, torn between a yelp and a sigh. In Sickness & In Flames tilts too far toward the former; the Front Bottoms have lost their bite.- Pitchfork
- Posted Aug 26, 2020
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Lina_Raül Refree is no Los Angeles clone. But it could be a long-lost, slightly weather-beaten cousin. Intimate, heartfelt, and solemnly inviting, it’s also a wonderful record in its own right.- Pitchfork
- Posted Aug 25, 2020
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Blush is a record of impressive variety, both in sentiment and sound. Some of the riskier arrows fall far off the mark, but more often than not, Hawke hits her targets with verve and style.- Pitchfork
- Posted Aug 25, 2020
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Given the album’s length and density, it resists close reading; if there is an organizing logic here, it is not readily apparent, although brushed drums and choppy vocal effects provide thematic through lines, and the occasional recurring motif lends a sense of narrative cohesion. But the music often unspools with natural ease.- Pitchfork
- Posted Aug 25, 2020
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Freeze, Melt nods to the conceptual artist John Baldessari, whose death at the start of 2020 might have warned us of the waves of bullshit to come. Its own concept is unimpeachable: Climate change does suck. Ice is a memory. Mostly, though, Freeze, Melt just feels like a nice warm bath.- Pitchfork
- Posted Aug 25, 2020
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On Source, she weaves together so many threads so masterfully that she instantly establishes herself as a foundational voice in the larger, ongoing story of the London jazz scene. Her debut is a stunning introduction.- Pitchfork
- Posted Aug 25, 2020
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Happy Birthday is strikingly raw. Moolchan’s refusal to bend to conventional song structure or recording techniques gives the music a sense of joyful rebellion. ... But as an artist whose defining quality is economy of language and texture, she falters when her songs are packed with too much sonic stimulation.- Pitchfork
- Posted Aug 24, 2020
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It’s essentially Bully’s re-introduction as a solo project, and these 12 songs capture the invigorating energy of the band’s 2015 debut.- Pitchfork
- Posted Aug 24, 2020
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