The Wire's Scores
- Music
For 2,899 reviews, this publication has graded:
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51% higher than the average critic
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7% same as the average critic
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42% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 0.8 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Music review score: 74
| Highest review score: | SMiLE | |
|---|---|---|
| Lowest review score: | Amazing Grace |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 2,420 out of 2899
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Mixed: 459 out of 2899
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Negative: 20 out of 2899
2899
music
reviews
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- Critic Score
As always Harris’s dedication to using a small spectrum of sounds to convey a wide range of emotions is noteworthy. Shade is another stunning piece of work – after all these years, Harris still makes it easier for some of us to get to know ourselves. [Oct 2021, p.48]- The Wire
Posted Dec 20, 2021 -
- Critic Score
Rarely has an album exemplified the 'body and soul' paid so much lip service in House music so willingly. [Apr 2008, p.58]- The Wire
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- Critic Score
Walls Have Ears is a postcard from Sonic Youth in their salad days, with newly recruited drummer Steve Shelley cementing a core line-up that would endure until disbandment 26 years later. [Apr 2024, p.75]- The Wire
Posted Mar 20, 2024 -
- The Wire
Posted Dec 2, 2014 -
- Critic Score
On Centres, the songs have a lyrical content that makes their meaning more discernible. [Aug 2016, p.48]- The Wire
Posted Aug 19, 2016 -
- Critic Score
This is a spellbinding album by a singular guitarist who combines the dexterity of Paco De Lucia with the hypnotic death-drawl of Bukka White. [Oct 2013, p.51]- The Wire
Posted Dec 10, 2013 -
- Critic Score
Narkopop has a symphonic majesty, a sense of form and forward movement that no prior Gas record quite reached. Voigt's forest no longer merely murmurs; it positively exults. [May 2017, p.46]- The Wire
Posted Aug 8, 2017 -
- Critic Score
He cites Frank Sinatra and Disney soundtracks as influences, and creates gorgeous music that paired with the vibrant visuals, disguises the horror within the film itself. [Sep 2019, p.56]- The Wire
Posted Aug 22, 2019 -
- Critic Score
Blues Dream is both a compendious evocation and synthesis of a range of genres that never sounds merely eclectic... It's one of Frisell's most ambitious productions to date. [#207, p.61]- The Wire
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- Critic Score
Hus’s second album Big Conspiracy is the refined work of a man who’s emerging calloused and implacable from a tough decade, most recently a 2017 conviction for carrying a knife which cost him eight months and a string of festival appearances. Through it all, his music has swayed joyously escapist more than harrowing or politically charged. [Apr 2020, p.56]- The Wire
Posted Mar 11, 2020 -
- Critic Score
Run The Jewels is a document of true friends finding the fun in being very angry. [Sep 2013, p.66]- The Wire
Posted Dec 10, 2013 -
- Critic Score
Praise A Lord is a record conceived and assembled with considerable care – literate, theatrical and elegantly audacious. [Apr 2023, p.62]- The Wire
Posted Mar 21, 2023 -
- Critic Score
Heart’s Ease picks up directly from where Lodestar left off. The lightness of touch of that earlier album, the delicate and sparse instrumental backing, so unobtrusive it enables rather than dominates, and her knack of filleting songs down to their bony essence, are all elements Collins pursues further here. [Aug 2020, p.52]- The Wire
Posted Jul 23, 2020 -
- Critic Score
This album is a stunning, multivalent piece of artistry that hits an anxious and weary world like a light-bearing gift. Remain In Light is one of the most fascinating albums in rock history, and Angélique Kidjo may have just released the definitive version. [Aug 2018, p.56]- The Wire
Posted Jul 26, 2018 -
- The Wire
Posted Sep 7, 2023 -
- Critic Score
Promises doesn’t always come across like a true meeting of equals. Laswell used the saxophonist as a plug-in element in the late 90s, Michael Mantler’s Jazz Composer’s Orchestra did the same on 1968’s Communications, and there’s a bit of that feel here. A player with as unique and instantly recognisable a voice as Sanders always risks becoming a gimmick, but his performance here is stunningly beautiful, and the album would be unimaginable without him. [Apr 2021, p.57]- The Wire
Posted Apr 5, 2021 -
- Critic Score
Warping songs into strange shapes is no guarantee of success in itself, but while Picton lets his imagination off the leash and his songs take some unravelling, they are structurally sound and melodically adventurous. [May 2026, p.59]- The Wire
Posted Apr 8, 2026 -
- Critic Score
More than the spiritual feel of Impulse! releases by Sanders or Coltrane, this music recalls the groove oriented work of Turrentine, Idris Muhammad and Grover Washington Jr for CTI and Kudu. It’s warm weather music, made to be played through speakers propped in open windows, facing the street. [Jul 2018, p.58]- The Wire
Posted Jul 13, 2018 -
- Critic Score
Complex puzzles for nimble feet to crack, custom-built for dancing. [Apr 2015, p.52]- The Wire
Posted May 15, 2015 -
- Critic Score
A warm and thoughtful record. Sometimes the production is a bit light--the first half in particular suffers from a rather MOR unobtrusiveness. But Laveaux’s voice is a treasure, her guitar playing is fresh and prickly, and things get more tangled and interesting the further along we go. [Apr 2018, p.67]- The Wire
Posted Apr 5, 2018 -
- Critic Score
Lullaby For The Lost is McCaslin's boldest iteration to date. [Oct 2025, p.56]- The Wire
Posted Oct 8, 2025 -
- Critic Score
It manages to evoke both void and overload simultaneously, and feels by turns oppressively dense and light as a feather. [Dec 2012, p.74]- The Wire
Posted Dec 7, 2012 -
- Critic Score
The Patience is a little less introverted [than 2021's Elephant In The Room], looking beyond the shutters of lockdown, and feels like Jenkins is maturing into an artist who is aware of how his frustrations need to breathe, wait (hence the title) and take time to coalesce. It’s his best music since his early mixtapes, and certainly his best official album since 2018’s remarkable Pieces Of A Man. [Sep 2023, p.57]- The Wire
Posted Oct 4, 2023 -
- Critic Score
LCD Soundsystem's gift is to forge iron from irony, show that cleverness need not be enervating. [#252, p.46]- The Wire
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- Critic Score
Explosively powerful, yet resoundingly fragile, her extended vocal technique illuminates an astoundingly rich range of embodied possibility. [Apr 2019, p.64]- The Wire
Posted May 20, 2019 -
- Critic Score
Double Negative stands alongside Yo La Tengo’s There’s A Riot Going On as a painfully honest expression of what it’s like to live in a post-truth country and have to call it your own. [Oct 2018, p.58]- The Wire
Posted Sep 21, 2018 -
- Critic Score
The nature of their interaction sheds light on the physics and mathematical realities which underlie music and its capacity to stimulate or move us. Often in that process Drift Multiply happens to be unapologetically beautiful. [Dec 2020, p.55]- The Wire
Posted Dec 8, 2020 -
- Critic Score
Raven is full of powerful earworms that mobilise every inch of soul and flesh. [Feb 2023, p.52]- The Wire
Posted Mar 21, 2023 -
- Critic Score
Each listen evokes a different feeling. At times there is a feeling of contentedness. [Oct 2019, p.55]- The Wire
Posted Oct 16, 2019 -
- Critic Score
The acclaimed spoken word poet works with a sterling cast of musicians, from co-production by Meshell Ndegeocello, Justin Brown and others, to vocals from Georgia Anne Muldrow ("Elsewhere"), Mereba ("Love Is A Choosing"), and Chicago rappers Mick Jenkins and Vic Mensa ("Melting Clocks"). [Jun 2026, p.69]- The Wire
Posted Jun 3, 2026 -
- Critic Score
That the album works so well is less a testament of Twigs's charisma and talent--real as those may be--than it is the limitless possibilities of well-paid freelance teamwork. [Nov 2014, p.63]- The Wire
Posted Dec 15, 2014 -
- Critic Score
Sound Ancestors is a masterpiece. The 16 pieces not only expand the conversation around the art of sampling, but also further hiphop’s ability to grow as a collaborative Black artform. [Mar 2021, p.54]- The Wire
Posted Apr 5, 2021 -
- Critic Score
Implausibly enduring, oddly endearing and extreme in ways both unexpected and otherwise. [Sep 2020, p.57]- The Wire
Posted Nov 6, 2020 -
- Critic Score
Combining tight dynamics with the blurred intent of an impressionistic backwsh, some tracks rush by like vast landscapes, with individual features suddenly highlighted in freeze-frames. [#228, p.59]- The Wire
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- Critic Score
While Steinski's work with DeFranco aka Double Dee, is the most dazzling--precisely because it avoids the pitfalls of run of the mill culture jamming and guerrilla media tactics--Steinski's solo tracks certainly have their own pleasures, even if they are more straightforwardly textural than his collabotation with Double Dee. [June 2008, p.57]- The Wire
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- Critic Score
It’s very easy to get lost in this music, in the sense of immersively absorbed rather than uncomprehending. [Jun 2022, p.47]- The Wire
Posted Jun 14, 2022 -
- Critic Score
So it's Ra the entertainer we get here.... On the second disc the first three tracks take matters further out. [Oct 2014, p.70]- The Wire
Posted Dec 2, 2014 -
- Critic Score
The new Pusha T album is more assured and therefore effective than the last Clipse album, nowhere near the focused brilliance of their first two. All production is handled by Kanye West who’s likewise harking back to his glory days with assorted updates on his College Dropout sound. [Jul 2018, p.62]- The Wire
Posted Jul 13, 2018 -
- Critic Score
His new LP is a sonic assault; holding tight to punk ruthlessness and discipline, drenched in Dirty South origins. [Oct 2018, p.68]- The Wire
Posted Sep 21, 2018 -
- Critic Score
Though the compilation is vast and the songs hardly bleed into one another--we’re often jumping genres, pivoting off cascading basslines and quickly changing pace without missing beats--there is a level of thematic cohesion here. [Feb 2019, p.66]- The Wire
Posted Jan 25, 2019 -
- Critic Score
Sometimes the music lingers too long in the in-between places, as though it’s not sure where it’s going. It probably doesn’t make sense for music that deals in ambivalence to be settled in itself, but some listeners may require a tiny bit more to believe in. [Jul 2024, p.50]- The Wire
Posted Jun 25, 2024 -
- Critic Score
It’s hard to get with the tiresome self-deprecation of that album title, the way he hides his pain behind a smile and hides his smile behind a dope aesthetic on that artfully blurred cover. When Earl does choose to project beyond his navel he has a powerful, booming voice and an ear for novelty. Where his gaze shifts to the outside world he can be inspirational. [Feb 2019, p.56]- The Wire
Posted Jan 25, 2019 -
- Critic Score
On Scaring The Hoes, Brown and Peggy sound great together while offering few artistic revelations. [May 2023, p.52]- The Wire
Posted Apr 11, 2023 -
- Critic Score
As with For You And I, the awkwardness of these beats seems dictated less by technical nuance and more by the idiosyncratic rhythms of the human body. ... Even more so than its predecessor, the album is maybe most striking when this idiosyncrasy explicitly reflects James’s lived experience as a Londoner, channelling the steppy rhythms of the hardcore continuum. [Jul 2021, p.60- The Wire
Posted Jun 29, 2021 -
- Critic Score
The album's so-called simple songs might be ambiguous enough to leave you wondering what they're about, even as you're thinking that they were written just for you. [Jun 2015, p.49]- The Wire
Posted Jun 5, 2015 -
- Critic Score
The album has almost Wagnerian scope and immersive power, and at just over 50 minutes it's well organised as a start-to-finish listen. [Mar 2011, p.50]- The Wire
Posted Apr 28, 2011 -
- Critic Score
His cartoonish vocals remain charmless, his lyrics as tediously self-referential as ever. [Oct 2017, p.57]- The Wire
Posted Oct 11, 2017 -
- The Wire
Posted Dec 22, 2021 -
- Critic Score
It's far from perfect record--the guests are phoned in, the beats sometime out-cheese pre-breakdown Kanye at his cheesiest--but it has more than a few perfect moments. [Jul 2013, p.68]- The Wire
Posted Jul 3, 2013 -
- Critic Score
Pick A Day To Die pieces together Sunburned fragments dating back to the late 2000s, resulting in an endearing zigzag of moods. [Mar 2021, p.58]- The Wire
Posted Apr 5, 2021 -
- Critic Score
An account of stifling domesticity plays out over a propulsive 4/4 rock beat and swirling woodwinds, which serve to evoke how, in spite of everything, she felt “electric, alive, spirited, fire and free”. .... Testament to the subterranean efforts to prevent this woman’s story from being forgotten. [Oct 2023, p.52]- The Wire
Posted Sep 25, 2023 -
- Critic Score
The combination of simple but taut musicality and literate lyricism is a winning one. [Apr 2021, p.54]- The Wire
Posted Apr 5, 2021 -
- Critic Score
It reignites the traditions it draws upon and creates something utterly contemporary. If this record sounds familiar, it is because it is the music your soul has already worked out we need for the struggles to come. [Jul 2017, p.46]- The Wire
Posted Aug 8, 2017 -
- Critic Score
Science Fiction Dancehall Classics is a more than serviceable as an On-U sound primer, yet may throw even those who think they know the label. [Oct 2015, p.70]- The Wire
Posted Oct 13, 2015 -
- Critic Score
The 20 minute centrepiece “Water Meditation” is a startlingly realised suite of wonder that flows from fragmentary shards of sax, voice and synths to stealthy dubby menace through to a collage of impacted noise and shattered beats that’s one of the most emotionally affecting delineations and reimaginings of resistant Black art you’re likely to hear in 2021. Essential listening, and the same can be said for Open The Gates as a whole. [Nov 2021, p.53]- The Wire
Posted Dec 20, 2021 -
- Critic Score
This is the most elaborately arranged thing Gunn has ever done, jammed full of understated yet excellent guitar. [Oct 2014, p.54]- The Wire
Posted Dec 2, 2014 -
- Critic Score
She delivers an almost unrelentingly banging techno set whose cuts, while perhaps underground, could never be referred to as deconstructed. [Apr 2019, p.57]- The Wire
Posted Apr 3, 2019 -
- Critic Score
Ultimately the digressions charm and gel thanks to the generosity of Freedia’s performances, marshalling us through dance manoeuvres in service to the communal heart of bounce. [Sep 2023, p.52]- The Wire
Posted Aug 8, 2023 -
- Critic Score
A few of these ten songs burble with easy rhythms – “Lye” rocks with crunchy, prog rock horns looped by The Alchemist. But overall, the tone of SICK! feels contemplative, slowly unfurling with repeated listens even as Earl crams over 20 minutes of thoughts into the work, with no hooks to leaven the intensity. [Mar 2022, p.43]- The Wire
Posted Mar 30, 2022 -
- Critic Score
It's inscrutable and inspired, and this time mystique has nothing to do with it. [Apr 2013, p.51]- The Wire
Posted Apr 24, 2013 -
- Critic Score
Galás crisply delivers excerpts from two works by the German expressionist poet Georg Heym, Das Fieberspital (The Fever Hospital) and Die Dämonen Der Stadt (The Demons Of The City). [Sep 2022, p.46]- The Wire
Posted Aug 31, 2022 -
- Critic Score
Like her otherwise innovative Couldn’t Wait To Tell You, the 41 minute album has its inevitable longueurs (the abstract “Snowing!”). Otherwise it moves along with purpose and confidence. [Apr 2023, p.56]- The Wire
Posted Mar 21, 2023 -
- Critic Score
The slick professionalism of Let X=X may, superficially, seem antithetical to the realisation of exploratory art, but it's integral to the personal discipline that supports her incisive insights and formal ironies. [Jun 2026, p.52]- The Wire
Posted Jun 2, 2026 -
- Critic Score
The mood is subdued, the backing spare, meditative, but--as we've become used to with Bush--lacking in any adventurousness of spirit, at points, you could even describe it as late night jazz club tasteful. [Dec 2011, p.52]- The Wire
Posted Dec 8, 2011 -
- Critic Score
While their tonal depths speak to undiscovered worlds, they’re grounded by the sound of Sakamoto’s breath, audible on every piano track. The palpable humanity is moving, and Sakamoto’s ease with melodic phrasing remains astonishing. ... Would these stark, simple pieces be as moving and filled with meaning for newcomers to his work? Perhaps not, but becoming an understanding receiver of work is one of the great privileges of longtime listening. [Feb 2023, p.45]- The Wire
Posted Mar 21, 2023 -
- Critic Score
Fires Within Fires is the summation of 30 years of experimentation in tonality and texture. Yes, Neurosis are firmly positioned within the extreme metal underground, yet their music, with its ability to generate images of beauty akin to those many of us have experienced in our own lives--not to mention the loss that accompanies them--challenges this categorisation. [Oct 2016, p.49]- The Wire
Posted Nov 8, 2016 -
- Critic Score
Absolutely gorgeous. ... It’s as clear, translucent and dazzling as the medium it both plays with and describes. [Mar 2018, p.52]- The Wire
Posted Feb 23, 2018 -
- Critic Score
On Malibu, melody unifies and smooths over divisions: rap and R&B, black history and black modernity, spiritual uplift with the rough material of the everyman's everyday, all made cohesive by Paak's considerable songwriting talent. [Apr 2016, p.64]- The Wire
Posted Mar 22, 2016 -
- Critic Score
The music is smooth, the message is simple and the demands aren’t easy, but they’re vital. [Mar 2025, p.51]- The Wire
Posted Feb 26, 2025 -
- Critic Score
Introspective, emotionally charged pieces such as “Father Time”, “We Cry Together” and “Savior” provide high – or jarring – points on the record, but elsewhere there are periods of lull absent on previous efforts. ... As sonically impressive as his latest album may be, his approach to the topics under discussion doesn’t feel sufficiently thought out. [Jul 2022, p.48]- The Wire
Posted Jun 15, 2022 -
- Critic Score
She’s doing something unique and off-kilter on her debut album. She plays analogue synth and pedal harp, both essentially dreamy instruments, and her compositions are like gentle blends of spiritual jazz and ambient music, not that far from Alice Coltrane’s devotionals, if remixed by The Orb and minus the chanting. [Jan 2022, p.71]- The Wire
Posted Dec 22, 2021 -
- Critic Score
Dreaming In The Non-Dream is a protest record through and through. It captures a rabid collective frustration and expels it with a palpable urgency. The fact that Forsyth and the rest of his group can do it with an eloquence that’s hard to summon in these dire times makes it all the more rewarding. [Sep 2017, p.50]- The Wire
Posted Sep 1, 2017 -
- Critic Score
The music for the horror/revenge fantasy developed from Cosmatos and Jóhannsson’s mutual appreciation of heavy metal and psychotronic cinema, and it shows. [Nov 2018, p.56]- The Wire
Posted Dec 13, 2018 -
- Critic Score
There’s a consistent low level sense of discomfort, or of familiar sounds or words taking on bizarro parallel forms. Lyrically, the album is enigmatic, full of personal mythologies, and swings between the divine (Jesus, Elvis) and the domestic (schools, peanut butter sandwiches). The song titles are a puzzle of repeated words and variations of phrases, like a secret language in plain sight. All over the album are sounds that can’t easily be identified, or that sit in between recognisable timbres. [Jul 2023, p.52]- The Wire
Posted Jun 29, 2023 -
- Critic Score
With no lyrics to anchor their meaning, many songs here are infused with pathos and awe. [Apr 2013, p.57]- The Wire
Posted Apr 24, 2013 -
- Critic Score
JPEGMAFIA ain’t really here for the put-ons and doesn’t expect his listeners to be either. But those expectations do not come without a kind of sound education, one that considers the context and multiplicity of characters he’s speaking to and through. In that way, Cornballs demands repeat plays, critical engagement and a goddamn sense of humour. [Nov 2019, p.57]- The Wire
Posted Oct 23, 2019 -
- The Wire
Posted Jul 24, 2012 -
- The Wire
Posted Aug 31, 2021 -
- The Wire
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- Critic Score
It’s an impressive whole, even if a few of the individual parts don’t hold up to scrutiny. [Jul 2021, p.70]- The Wire
Posted Jul 28, 2021 -
- Critic Score
Littered with fragments of found voice recordings and beefed up with pumping guitar riffs, Attempted Martyr takes no prisoners and, in the spirit of the group's origin state, efficiently kicks out the jams. [May 2026, p.61]- The Wire
Posted Apr 14, 2026 -
- Critic Score
If Atrocity Exhibition doesn’t connect with quite the same power, it’s not for lack of commitment or craft. [Oct 2016, p.53]- The Wire
Posted Nov 8, 2016 -
- Critic Score
A World Lit Only By Fire finds Godflesh on pleasingly resolute form. [Dec 2014, p.57]- The Wire
Posted Dec 16, 2014 -
- Critic Score
Propulsive and beautifully weighted, this is music of absolute clarity. Sangare’s voice gleams adamantine. [Oct 2020, p.67]- The Wire
Posted Nov 6, 2020 -
- Critic Score
Sunn O))) tend to proceed like a river frozen down to glacial subsonics, or molten rock creeping slowly across parched land, and have referred to the processes of nature in their work before. Here, however, they feel directly linked to some universal essence of landscape. [May 2026, p.57]- The Wire
Posted Apr 8, 2026 -
- Critic Score
“Hot Pink” reads clearly like “BIPP”-era SOPHIE, with its urgent metallic breakdowns and deep, heavy bass lines, while the high synth registers and spatial ambient of “It’s Not Just Me” conjecture a Generation Z folk-pop-disco hybrid. As a more mainstream addition to the avant-pop trajectory of artists like SOPHIE and felicita, however, Let’s Eat Grandma are not nearly as disruptive and original. [Sep 2018, p.49]- The Wire
Posted Aug 8, 2018 -
- Critic Score
It is al-gitarra in the classic style: raw and intimate, with the gravel-voiced Abaraybone leading the band through the militant and melancholy blues that have long been his trademark. [Oct 2019, p.61]- The Wire
Posted Sep 13, 2019 -
- Critic Score
Much of the album feels like this – danceable songs with lyrics that urge thought about the state of the world and your own place within it. The most engaging moments are those where Hval lets herself escape into the pure fun of making jams. ... On a quarantine album, a little bit of escapism feels right. Hval continues to ponder philosophy in her writing, but throughout Classic Objects she brings light to her fears and memories too. [Mar 2022, p.48]- The Wire
Posted Mar 30, 2022 -
- Critic Score
Pateras is much less dominant in the mix, mostly smouldering beneath the scintillating haze of distortion but occasionally slicing through like white light. Sitting on top of the mix are an assortment of glowing meditation bells played at unexpected intervals, which have the effect of plucking awareness from the dark recesses of sound one could otherwise be pulled all the way into. [May 2019, p.63]- The Wire
Posted May 7, 2019 -
- Critic Score
Even beyond this shared ending/beginning, the new material flows like a continuation of the previous album, but with a more progressive and tenser edge to it. [Apr 2022, p.56]- The Wire
Posted Apr 1, 2022 -
- Critic Score
It's an unlikely triumph of personality, a glacially slow decay of his icy facade revealing an earnest dedication to his craft, in its own way every bit as spiritual as his brother's more orthodox practice. [Feb 2016, p.56]- The Wire
Posted Feb 18, 2016 -
- Critic Score
In Cauda Venenum is a peculiarly convincing example of retro rock but that’s not to say the album is anchored to one particular scene or era. ... What’s also helpful is that frontman and bandleader Mikael Åkerfeldt has one of the most distinctive voices in contemporary rock, an impassioned croon whose soulfulness defuses any potential for pomposity. [Dec 2019, p.57]- The Wire
Posted Nov 20, 2019 -
- Critic Score
I found myself wishing [the booklet] was three times longer and the music three CDs less. [Nov 2011, p.60]- The Wire
Posted Dec 6, 2011 -
- Critic Score
Gay’s latest is a deep dive into memory but emerges as a triumphant celebration of a past and future antilineage, uniquely conjured from the inner complexities of an artist not tortured by the past but possessed by it. [Dec 2021, p.50]- The Wire
Posted Dec 21, 2021 -
- Critic Score
Less successful is “Turned To Stone”, a somewhat sluggish performance that indicates a temporary loss of direction, hobbled by formless vocal grunts that are accompanied by bouts of panic stricken death metal guitar noodling when the otherwise omnipresent grim mood falters. Mercifully Obituary swiftly regain their footing and kick back with “Straight To Hell.” [Apr 2017, p.52]- The Wire
Posted Jun 2, 2017 -
- Critic Score
At nearly two hours long, it can get claustrophobic and anti-exuberant out of these tunes' native club element.... Nonetheless, there's an undeniable freshness.- The Wire
Posted Dec 13, 2013 -
- Critic Score
Their words are not protest or polemic, but messages from the frontline of a war that’s being waged under our noses and hidden in plain sight. And also, crucially, it completely slaps. [Jun 2022, p.44]- The Wire
Posted Jun 14, 2022 -
- Critic Score
This album feels more urgent and defiant than its predecessor. [Jun 2023, p.49]- The Wire
Posted May 22, 2023 -
- Critic Score
Especially potent are moments in which Rundle’s velvety delivery overlaps with Bryan Funck’s bitter growls. Here, they find strength in one another and traverse a valley infested by guitar riffs dripping with filth, earthshaking tom hits and forlorn swirls of folk, leaving behind a harsh yet stunning trail of music. [Dec 2020, p.62]- The Wire
Posted Dec 3, 2020 -
- Critic Score
Combined with the sincere and fiery anguish of Lenker’s delivery, this propensity for surprise makes Big Thief a genuinely affecting proposition. [Nov 2019, p.50]- The Wire
Posted Oct 23, 2019