The Quietus' Scores
- Music
For 2,374 reviews, this publication has graded:
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61% higher than the average critic
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8% same as the average critic
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31% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 3.2 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Music review score: 76
Score distribution:
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Positive: 2,109 out of 2374
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Mixed: 244 out of 2374
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Negative: 21 out of 2374
2374
music
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Critic Score
It's good to know that, like you and me, he's swimming hard against the ever increasing tide of shit and still, in the main, coming up smelling of roses and refusing to back down.- The Quietus
- Posted Apr 12, 2016
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Even if fans of Pere Ubu take Pere Ubu seriously, it is clear that Pere Ubu aren't entirely serious about Pere Ubu. The quartet of LPs contained on Architecture Of Language highlight this more so than perhaps The Modern Dance and for this reason should not be left aside.- The Quietus
- Posted Apr 8, 2016
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It's Venetian Snares going back to the root of his influences by means of a longer-established medium. An admirable idea well executed, but as a listener I'm just not ready for a drill & bass revival and as such this album beggars few repeat plays.- The Quietus
- Posted Apr 6, 2016
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BBF is a rare example of an album that invites both arty introspection and head nodding. Much like Blunt himself, BBF is not always easy to love. But that makes the eventual rewards even more satisfying.- The Quietus
- Posted Apr 5, 2016
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Laid-back philosophies punctuate this album, which again suggests a kind of bemused contentedness with life. There's nothing too highfaluting or over-stretching, though musings are thought-provoking enough.- The Quietus
- Posted Apr 5, 2016
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Above all, it represents a bold, sensorily majestic step in the right direction by an artist no longer content to tread water.- The Quietus
- Posted Apr 5, 2016
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It doesn't always work, but that's what makes Grapefruit live up to its name--the epitome of an acquired taste; one that, when hooked on the intricacies and possibilities of its flavour, opens up so much potential for the future.- The Quietus
- Posted Apr 4, 2016
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Nisennenmondai will fill your head with strange, billowing thoughts as their compositions sprint towards infinity. Approached in the correct spirit--principally an understanding that this is music that will ask questions rather than provide answers--their conjurings are irresistible.- The Quietus
- Posted Apr 1, 2016
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This apparently punkish slam out, is their finest to date. For it seems to capture the very essence of Islington Mill which, coincidently, is situated in the darkest corner of Salford.- The Quietus
- Posted Apr 1, 2016
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An album on which Underworld reestablish themselves as supreme dance music architects.- The Quietus
- Posted Mar 29, 2016
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Mind Of Mine is an impressive enough debut, with excellent, laidback production and assured vocals. It's lyrically stunted, it's too long, and the overall sound is not starkly original, but the subtle elements of South Asian sounds set a promising tone of fusion.- The Quietus
- Posted Mar 29, 2016
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I AKA I is eclectic and forceful, but always at the service of melody, atmosphere and, if you listen hard enough, emotion.- The Quietus
- Posted Mar 25, 2016
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Atomic is a conceptual artwork that is overshadowed and at times overburdened by its subject matter. Yet taken in this context it holds a brutalist, otherworldly thrall all its own.- The Quietus
- Posted Mar 25, 2016
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There was a time when Primal Scream were considered essential, an acclaimed element of the indie rock landscape, and more than anything, Chaosmosis simply confirms that those days remain firmly in the past.- The Quietus
- Posted Mar 25, 2016
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Both Iyer and Smith perform exquisitely throughout (and yes, Manfred Eicher's clear production captures them perfectly), but also apply their notes, chords, solo flourishes and textures with intellectual aplomb and emotional potency. This is music from the heart performed by the brain.- The Quietus
- Posted Mar 23, 2016
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Compassion is such an easy listen. The melodies are so cheerful, so simple and memorable, they require absolutely no effort to enjoy.- The Quietus
- Posted Mar 17, 2016
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- Critic Score
Of Desire is the duo's most widescreen statement to date and one that blends cinematic sweeps with the post-punk sensibilities of Joy Division at their most glacial and The Cure at the height of their early 80s lysergic anguish.- The Quietus
- Posted Mar 14, 2016
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As percussive as her previous offerings, A Man Alive is jaunty but perhaps less folky than normal, endowed significantly with the spirit of Tune-Yards' Merill Garbus, the queen of both loop and uke.... That's not to deny that this album is a step forward, however.- The Quietus
- Posted Mar 14, 2016
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A perfectly fine release, Untitled Unmastered doesn't exist to change anyone's mind about Lamar.- The Quietus
- Posted Mar 10, 2016
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This resultant collage, produced by all this cutting and pasting of personal experience and observational wisdom, is a wonderful snapshot in time of the thoughts behind one of the most unique voices in British rap.- The Quietus
- Posted Mar 7, 2016
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Unlike the cohesiveness of earlier releases, Echtzeit has the feel of a compendium of sketches playing upon inherent strengths within Roedelius's considerable back catalogue. However, what it lacks in experiential probing is made up for by the simple fact of Echtzeit being a nice place to dwell and linger.- The Quietus
- Posted Mar 3, 2016
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Despite the forcefulness of its concept, Brute thus often feels less like music of protest than music of exhaustion, confusion, and diffuse rage. This can make for an oppressive and tiring listen, but at best its effect is unsettling, and suggestive of traumatised detachment--a familiar enough reaction to the barrage of grim reports that make up the daily online news churn.- The Quietus
- Posted Mar 3, 2016
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Värähtelijä is most definitely descended from trope-riddled black metal, but no other band is anywhere near taking the music in a more interesting and open-ended direction while retaining its brutal core.- The Quietus
- Posted Mar 3, 2016
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It's generally noisy and gnarly, variously downtuned or detuned and proud of its metallic heft; if you've encountered Årabrot in the past, this will be expected. It also has a dark, velveteen grace which feels derived from both pop and cabaret songwriting, and while previous records by the band have hinted at this tendency, here they've embraced it to a far greater degree than before.- The Quietus
- Posted Mar 2, 2016
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Convenanza regularly dips into a bag of tried and tested moves that are little more than default settings: dubby basslines, plenty of space, echoes, jazzy trumpets that sound like deflating balloons and so on.- The Quietus
- Posted Feb 26, 2016
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When Brood Ma gets all his dice in a row, he comes close to nailing it. But more often than not, his attempts fall short because of their sheer hyperactivity.- The Quietus
- Posted Feb 23, 2016
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West is consistently the weak link. The musical patchwork of The Life Of Pablo is frequently--but not always--diverting in its restlessness and detail, from the abruptness with which Price is faded out on 'Ultralight Beam' to the scrawling guitars that underpin 'Feedback', probably the most straightforwardly good song on the album.- The Quietus
- Posted Feb 22, 2016
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The Gamble is an engaging opening salvo, which one hopes will become the first statement of an ongoing narrative.- The Quietus
- Posted Feb 17, 2016
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For all the heroics on display here, though, it sometimes sounds as though these three hyper-prolific virtuosos are--believe it or not--resting in something of a comfort zone. They've increased their compositional and improvisational fortitude as a unit, but they're still wandering the same general aural territory as Rangda (or Sun City Girls or Chasny's Comets On Fire).- The Quietus
- Posted Feb 16, 2016
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It's a cavalcade, certainly, but a thrilling one which feels like the proper realisation of Adebimpe, Drucker and Patton's quixotic talents combined.- The Quietus
- Posted Feb 9, 2016
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