The Telegraph (UK)'s Scores
- Music
For 1,341 reviews, this publication has graded:
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62% higher than the average critic
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4% same as the average critic
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34% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 3.9 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Music review score: 77
| Highest review score: | Sometimes I Might Be Introvert | |
|---|---|---|
| Lowest review score: | Killer Sounds |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 957 out of 1341
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Mixed: 381 out of 1341
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Negative: 3 out of 1341
1341
music
reviews
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- Critic Score
A string section and gospel choir barely add nuance to straight-ahead karaoke versions of Oasis classics and a few of Liam’s solo songs.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Jun 16, 2020
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- Critic Score
At its best, Born in the Echoes is gloriously disorienting, restoring a woozy mania to a genre in danger of self-combusting in search of ever more euphoric pop highs. The kids will probably look on aghast. But old ravers will find themselves transported back to a time when electronica really did sound like the future.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Jul 13, 2015
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It’s easy to make fun of, but the melodies are uniformly gorgeous, the layered synth and string arrangements are bright and exciting, Smith’s singing is filled with pliant emotion, and it all adds up to a pop album so addictive that it feels as though it had been intravenously injected into my system.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Feb 4, 2022
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- Critic Score
The melodies aren't as strong as those on Backwoods Barbie but Dolly Parton's wit, sincerity and plucky pragmatism allow her to get away with simplistic advice like: "Lead the good life, just treat this planet right and try to all be friends" and icky lines about painting pretty rainbows in the sky.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Aug 25, 2011
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For all Byrne’s other endeavours, music is the forum where his quirky, zany, challenging ideas achieve emotionally satisfying expression. American Utopia is another glittering offering from an old master.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Mar 8, 2018
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- Critic Score
Fairport Convention are like the Stanley Matthews of folk music--age does nothing to erode essential quality.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Apr 27, 2011
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The duo's sinister raps are as shockingly impressive as they are morally disturbing.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Jun 28, 2011
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- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Aug 18, 2011
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- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Sep 20, 2011
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- Critic Score
Their bluesy approach doesn't draw anything truly rich and strange from their vintage Cambodian material.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Dec 6, 2011
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- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Aug 23, 2012
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- Critic Score
The highlight [of Mystic Pinball] is an affecting ballad called No Wicked Grin. It's Hiatt at his tender best.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Oct 12, 2012
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- Critic Score
Elusive and ethereal, it hints at the late night soulscapes of the Blue Nile but remains boldly, if at times frustratingly, out of focus.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Apr 19, 2013
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- Critic Score
The 14 songs ooze energy and style and feature long-term collaborators such as Alan Kelly, Ian Carr, Roy Dodds and John McCusker.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Feb 13, 2014
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This is a warm, bluesy album of country-fuelled rock ’n’ roll that oozes old-timer class.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Oct 27, 2014
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Easily the best thing she has done since her album of Muscle Shoals sessions, New Routes, which she made in the early Seventies.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted May 22, 2015
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A very fine debut album from Californian singer-songwriter, who has a wonderfully rich and mournful country voice.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Jul 20, 2016
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Disco offers a set of familiar grooves. ... Her comfort zone is effervescence and escapism, in the pursuit of which Disco stays light on its feet and easy on the ear. We’ve heard it all before, but Kylie has the floor, and, honestly, she sounds like she’s having a (glitter)ball.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Nov 5, 2020
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- Critic Score
This appealing set of 12 short, sweet, heartfelt songs rattles along with gorgeous vocals, silvery guitar lines and perky bass and drum rhythms, stirring a jaunty singalong spirit of friends on a mission. But if the Lathums truly aspire to be the indie voice of a new generation, they are going to have to sharpen their quills or invest in a rhyming dictionary.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Sep 24, 2021
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The tension and ambiguity implicit in downbeat songs with upbeat choruses lies at the heart of an album that may not easily yield its secrets but will keep you singing as you try to work them out.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Jan 14, 2022
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At the heart of Ezra’s mainstream pop appeal is a sense of joy that infuses his music with radiant positivity. In such troubled times, Ezra’s escapism is pure gold.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Jun 10, 2022
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Mabel also retains the tender, thoughtful quality that infused her debut album High Expectations (2019), and this makes for an impressively nuanced flow.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Jul 15, 2022
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More than half a century later, those youthful ambitions are herein fulfilled, in 10 tracks of maturity and majesty.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Mar 31, 2023
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The Endless Coloured Ways could have been just another exhibit on the exquisitely curated but ever growing pile of Drake nostalgia. Instead, it’s an essential manual on the art of songwriting.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Aug 21, 2023
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- Critic Score
If you simply want to revel in the elemental pleasures of sleek, clever, catchy songs played with rough vigour by a band who love to rock, then the Vaccines deliver their usual payload. .... They lack the boldness of the bands that most influenced their sound (The Ramones, Jesus and the Mary Chain) or the flair and ambition of others still flying the pop-rock flag (The Killers, Arctic Monkeys, The Libertines). On this evidence, The Vaccines are approaching their expiry date.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Jan 12, 2024
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- Critic Score
At times you might wish for a bit more sonic edge to match some of the biting lyrics, but this is a solid debut from exciting young talent – there’s little evidence of any teething problems here.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Apr 26, 2024
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- Critic Score
If the song strategies seem predictable and the sentiments over familiar, the album as a whole still grips my heart and squeezes. I find myself wanting to listen to it again and again, and I can’t say that about every album I review.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Sep 13, 2024
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- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted May 16, 2014
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- Critic Score
Hynes's voice is refined into an emotive croon. Inventive pop from a bright indie talent.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Aug 10, 2011
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Concrete and Gold is an ambitious and entertaining album. But when it comes to a comparison with Sergeant Pepper, it doesn’t earn its stripes.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Sep 19, 2017
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Sometimes, Cage the Elephant’s lyrics can veer into a teen angst that jars against their middle-aged image: “I don’t want to play those games, will we ever be the same?”. But when they sound this good, they can just about get away with it.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted May 17, 2024
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It's an introspective work - family breakdowns, fractured romances and his own restless, addictive character pour forth in a variety of low-key yet lush arrangements featuring sombre brass accents.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Apr 2, 2012
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He's made the kind of record that every kid rummaging through boxes of Seventies vinyl at the car boot sale hopes to find. One that lovingly reassembles a 21st-century impression of that era's warm autumnal hues and tactile textures.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Mar 12, 2012
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The Other Side of Make Believe scarcely risks driving away disciples. Nor does it cravenly go after fresh converts.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Jul 15, 2022
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With the right collaborators she can conjure golden moments.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Nov 28, 2011
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- Critic Score
These soft shoe shuffles sway up and down the same few notes, with the affectionate embrace of mother of the groom dances.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Dec 14, 2012
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Quest for Fire is still visceral EDM designed to get the pulse racing, but the whole thing has been given an ambitious refresh. The second coming of Skrillex starts here.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Feb 17, 2023
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- Critic Score
The album, which was funded by producer Jeffrey Gaskill through Kickstarter, is full of treats; and Johnson deserves 21st-century acknowledgement.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Apr 1, 2016
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- Critic Score
A little bit of Ringo goes a long way, which has been the challenge of his solo career. The good news is that his 20th album may genuinely be his best since the post-Beatles highs of the 1970s.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Jan 10, 2025
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- Critic Score
When the harmonies blend and Andersson’s piano rings out, it sounds enough like Abba to have hardcore fans tossing their feather boas in the air. But the dancing queens have lost the spring in their step, and the result is out-of-time rather than timeless.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Nov 4, 2021
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- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Oct 24, 2011
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- Critic Score
Taylor aimed for “sing-along stadium tropes” on this new album, mainly achieved via a sizeable chorus who lend their lungs to many of its tracks, often to rousing effect. .... Despite the choral boost, Taylor’s music only really unleashes its full power on stage — it deserves to be experienced live.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Apr 25, 2025
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- Critic Score
This fourth may not reach those heights [of the first two albums], but it’s a solid effort from a band who, above all else, just sound grateful to have survived.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Apr 5, 2024
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Every track on Volcano flows beautifully, almost overloaded with hooks and harmonies, and charged with rhythmic intent. But the soundscapes are infinitely brighter and weirder and more thrillingly modern.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Apr 19, 2017
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- Critic Score
This is not jazz for the purist but it is a heartfelt and entertaining tribute to one of the musical greats.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Sep 8, 2014
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On his fifth album, he seizes the mainstream jugular with a lushly romantic, brightly orchestrated and delightfully optimistic collection of epic love songs.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Jun 20, 2011
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- Critic Score
Tomorrow... deepens on repeated listening, with Yorke locating moments of beauty and calm in the eye of his anxiety.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Oct 2, 2014
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This highly enjoyable celebration of the Lord is co-produced by country star Jamey Johnson.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Jul 18, 2011
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Buddy Miller organised a Grade A country guitarist convention, threw in some wonderful guest vocalists and then recorded, as if live, an impressive album.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Mar 16, 2011
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A sensational debut from the British rapper. Tempah's wit, imagery and rhythmic flow is offset by schoolboy humour and a tendency to build raps from non sequiturs.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted May 16, 2011
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- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Mar 16, 2011
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- Critic Score
The Thrill of It All is stripped back to bare emotional bones, shot through with vulnerability and sensitivity, not so much wearing its heart on its sleeve as proffering an open vein.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Nov 3, 2017
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Always Ascending is every bit as smart and dynamic as their acclaimed debut, but familiarity has dampened its dramatic impact.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Feb 9, 2018
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You’re So Impatient rattles along like a lost mid-’60s garage-psychedelia nugget, but with a simmering fury that lurks unresolved. The near title track, Jane (The Night the Zombies Came) gives baroque chamber-pop a surreal cinematic twist, with its Morricone twang and offbeat “Jane!” chorus shouts.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Oct 25, 2024
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- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Jun 29, 2012
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- Critic Score
Positions is not as immediate as the work Grande is known for, though it will find many fans. There are no tentpole hits, no obvious hooks and far too many words crammed into 14 relatively short and sometimes samey songs. But it explores new territory for the singer: new relationships, a new sound, a new sense of self.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Oct 30, 2020
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- Critic Score
Unwanted calls to mind a Jacqueline Wilson novel transposed into an LP format, its 12 songs relentlessly circling over ‘difficult emotions’ – awkwardness, rejection, and, yes, it’s okay to express your anger. And these, of course, are well-worn teen-pop topics already.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Aug 12, 2022
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Long Live the Angels is something special, the sound of a gifted, grown-up singer-songwriter using all the tools at her disposal to put her own heart back together.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Nov 10, 2016
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Give Or Take presents Giveon as an undeniable talent who isn’t inclined to go deeper than his comfort zone for now; he coasts quite sweetly, between heartache and humblebrag.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Jul 26, 2022
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- Critic Score
Everybody sounds like they’re having fun, and listeners of a certain vintage probably will too. But it adds little of interest to Morrison’s incredible canon, which from Blowin’ Your Mind in 1967 to Irish Heartbeat in 1988 ranks with the greatest popular music ever made.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Nov 3, 2023
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This is a brave album both sonically and strategically. Mendes’ previous four albums topped the US album chart so changing lanes is admirably risky. But I’m unconvinced this represents a great leap forward.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Nov 15, 2024
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- Critic Score
The best of the album is so fantastic it makes me want more from the rest.... Yet there is something tepid about the overall emotional temperature.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Jul 27, 2015
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With the hard-hitting yet loose-limbed playing of Rage Against the Machine drummer Brad Wilk, there is a real sense of top professionals at work.... Osbourne’s singing, by contrast, is strangely unexpressive, perhaps because there is no real possibility of emotional connection with lyrics that strain for grandiose effect but are flattened by clunking phrases and trite rhyming schemes.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Jun 7, 2013
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- Critic Score
Its dark, off-kilter twists and trapdoors become moreish as liquorice.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Dec 5, 2014
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Something Beautiful has three decent tracks (fizzy dance song End Of the World, emotional ballad More to Lose and the elegiac Golden Burning Sun) and one absolute monster of a sad banger, Easy Lover, that stands out like a blazing beacon amidst a parade of trite ditties overstretched far beyond their natural life to encompass banal poetic codas.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted May 29, 2025
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Not really a blockbuster, it’s the kind of album that makes most sense in the small hours, after the party is over.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Feb 6, 2014
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The most compelling tracks take drastic liberties with the original material, deconstructing Kinshasa sound systems into industrial-tropical hoedowns that reflect postmodern London more than Africa's teeming townships.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Nov 3, 2011
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There’s plenty to applaud on a promising debut, but, as yet, not enough to believe in.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Aug 11, 2016
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- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Oct 14, 2013
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- Critic Score
Not as cohesive as their very best work, R.E.M.'s 15th album is still as smart, sonically rich and emotionally resonant as a guitar band can ever hope to be.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Mar 4, 2011
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Every track is polished and purposeful, but the sheer busy quality of her singing and overactive variety of the production ensures that Liberation never settles into a coherent listening experience.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Jun 18, 2018
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- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Oct 5, 2017
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The album has to be judged a late-period triumph, even if I am not entirely convinced The Voice's avuncular judge is quite as deep as the material demands.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted May 21, 2012
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- Critic Score
The don’t-bore-us, get-to-the-chorus model followed by the top half of Night Call works fine when taken in pieces, or as the beat-driven soundtrack to a gym workout. But it frustrates and alienates in its album sequence. Yet, Night Call delivers in affirming Olly Alexander as an artist capable of connecting with a varied, multi-generational audience.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Jan 21, 2022
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- Critic Score
The songs are anthemic, surprisingly upbeat calls to arms which suggest that Templeman is one to watch.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted May 27, 2022
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Muse are a blockbuster band, and this is another box-office-demolishing spectacular – it would feel like self-denial not to surrender. Honestly, the end of the world has rarely sounded like so much fun.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Aug 26, 2022
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- Critic Score
Mascara Streakz may not reinvent the wheel, but it does stand confidently among their greatest hits while making a compelling case for having that fifth shot of tequila.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Aug 26, 2022
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There are glimmers of his facility for earworm melodies and nimble grooves, but they tend to be overwhelmed by an air of bombastic stridency.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Nov 12, 2022
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The fortunes of this soundtrack will ultimately rest with the success of the film but its brooding mix of old and new styles certainly wets your appetite to see it.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Jan 27, 2011
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It’s a brave band that unleashes such an extensive body of work. It’s lucky, then, that it’s all so eminently listenable.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Nov 18, 2022
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The sound is lean and clean, sharply separated with individual instrumentation shining through and not a lot of over-dubbing or effects.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Apr 1, 2022
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It is only eight songs and comes in under 25 minutes long, yet it packs more hooks than a whaling armada. It is short, punchy and sweet enough to cause tooth rot, every moment crammed with crafted earworms and swaggering beats.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Oct 2, 2020
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The Civil Wars offers up 12 perfectly elegant, subtly arranged Americana songs of bad love, misplaced emotion, cheating hearts, fighting and fleeing.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Aug 1, 2013
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That Cabello is clearly a fine singer hasn’t stopped producers smoothing her with Auto-Tune. Romance is state-of-the-art pop yet it lacks the real romance of music made from the heart. If you feel like you’ve heard it before, it may be because you literally have.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Dec 6, 2019
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Avonmore is classic, if not quite vintage, Ferry, lacking the distinctive songcraft of his finest work.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Nov 17, 2014
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Their pairing might well be bananas, but it works. Buckley is certainly no luvvie on leave. This is, at times, a dazzling album.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Jun 24, 2022
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Their tenth studio album kicks off in fine form with the first single, San Quentin. ... If only the whole album was like this, but instead listeners will get whiplash from all the genre changes, which spans American rock, country and frat-boy pop.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Nov 30, 2022
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What feels right (or at least absolutely right now) about Metric is the perfect balance, every element in its place and in service of a set of sinuous, hook-laden, elegantly crafted pop songs.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Jun 22, 2012
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Gaga goes over the top and keeps on going: exhilarating, exhausting blockbuster entertainment.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted May 24, 2011
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- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Apr 25, 2013
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- Critic Score
The Texas-raised Malone proves genuinely good at this stuff, with a sharp lyrical wit and sweet singing voice that rises to heights of soulful passion when needs be, notably on the disco flecked What Don’t Belong to Me and twisty alt-folk of Nosedive (the latter with Lainey Wilson).- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Aug 20, 2024
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- Critic Score
This album proves Lewis can master the mainstream, too, with earworms to soundtrack parties from Brooklyn to Brixton. So much more than “just a DJ”, one suspects that within a few short years, Lewis will be selling out stadiums.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Jan 27, 2023
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Like Barrett and Wilson, Teleman indulge a whimsy that can tip into tweeness. But the melodic repetitions and slightly eerie echo around the guitar line give it a weird edge that works.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Jun 6, 2014
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- Critic Score
It is, I suppose, all very tasteful and yet it retains the original’s inherent oddness.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Nov 21, 2013
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- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Dec 2, 2011
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- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Feb 14, 2025
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- Critic Score
All Bay has really done is exchange one set of generic production clichés for another.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted May 18, 2018
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Content is their best record since the late-Seventies, packed with savagely danceable riffs and rousingly incisive lyrics about consumerism, domestic fragmentation and political resistance.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Jan 21, 2011
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- Critic Score
[Willie Nelson] brings feeling and charm to these 11 covers.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Apr 22, 2016
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- Critic Score
With soulful vocals, delicate stories and vulnerable lyrics, Moss makes for a delightful listen.- The Telegraph (UK)
- Posted Sep 23, 2022
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