The Wire's Scores
- Music
For 2,879 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: 2,404 out of 2879
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Mixed: 455 out of 2879
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Negative: 20 out of 2879
2879
music
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Critic Score
Trees Outside The Academy is a relaxed, organic record that charms without really trying, and perhaps the closest Moore will ever come to the lost Moby Grape album. [Sep 2007, p.57]- The Wire
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- Critic Score
Although the hard-hearted and selfconsciously cool may dismiss them as the avant folk scene's answer to Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, that's no reason to deny one's self the joyous singalong harmonies of 'Don't Be Afraid, You're Already Dead." [Oct 2007, p.71]- The Wire
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- Critic Score
The nine songs her give a reason for detractors to raise their voices and for devotees to hope for something a little more evolved. [Sep. 2007, p.49]- The Wire
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- Critic Score
It's an extraordinary and compelling celebration of a hardcore punk classic. [Oct 2007, p.71]- The Wire
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- Critic Score
The [guest] musicians have the good sense to know when to let Chesnutt's dry-leaf vocals and muted acoustic guitar carry the songs, and when to swell up and bring heightened Gothic intensity to the feelings of melancholy and dread. [Oct 2007, p.55]- The Wire
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- Critic Score
Sometimes Liars sounds like a group whose previous sonic journeying has inspired a fresh look at the familiar. All too often, however, it's as though, having stepped outside the confines of conventional song, they can never believe in it enough to return. [Sep 2007, p.56]- The Wire
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- Critic Score
'Bomboo Banga' is pure power monotony, her deadpan one-note voice mixed with car engines, samples of Bombay pop, Booty Bass and tribal rhythms, is a perfect soundtrack to a stroll down London's Banglatown. [Sep 2007, p.57]- The Wire
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- Critic Score
Lyrically Public Enemy's new album packs no surprises. [Oct 2007, p.75]- The Wire
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- Critic Score
As inspired as it is, The Return Of Dr Octagon is no sequel. [#269, p.44]- The Wire
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- Critic Score
There's such a freshness to Brett Sparks's music that few comparisons can be made. [#269, p.42]- The Wire
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- The Wire
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What stands out across Rather Ripped are the remarkable melodic turns throughout. [#268, p.63]- The Wire
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- Critic Score
What's distinctive about Son is that it is more layered and inventive than Segundo and Tres Cosas. [#268, p.58]- The Wire
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- Critic Score
[By "We Dream Free"] it all starts to loosen up and swing a bit more. But even here it ends up treading water. [#269, p.42]- The Wire
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- Critic Score
Herbert still seems like the same oddball he ever was. But the first half of Scale underlines how much fun there is to be had in playing the misfit. [#268, p.56]- The Wire
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- The Wire
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There's more here than nostalgia, with a range of styles and influences incorporated into Cabic's deceptively direct arrangements, and an afterglow that's testament to his talents. [#269, p.53]- The Wire
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- Critic Score
This is a remarkably rich and complex achievement. [#267, p.52]- The Wire
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At first Songs And Other Things sounds simple to the point of throwaway, but gradually gives up its secrets after a number of plays. [#266, p.67]- The Wire
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A beautifully realised collection, Around is remarkably ego-free -- perhaps too much so. [#266, p.67]- The Wire
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There's less sense of puzzle and struggle than we're used to with Aphex Twin... but Chosen Lords is certainly meticulous and absorbing. [#266, p.51]- The Wire
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Introduction serves both as a reminder of Thompson's often overlooked sense of humour and an exploration of certain cliches endemic to the pop song, but most importantly, it just rocks. [#266, p.63]- The Wire
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Nearly a quarter of a century after its initial release, My Life In The Bush Of Ghosts remains a beautifully finished work, despite its complexity: every line and fragment in place, every surface and effect neatly separated out. [#266, p.56]- The Wire
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A clear triumph, a dense work destined to grow thicker with each listen. [#266, p.65]- The Wire
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A sound thrumming with bold analogue synthesizers and beefy rock drums. [#254, p.67]- The Wire
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As you try to sift through the dense crosstalk of twittering beats, your ears are beguiled ever deeper into Konono's rhythmic threshing machine. [#253, p.52]- The Wire
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- Critic Score
These are what protest songs can sound like, feel like and taste like in the 21st century. [#257, p.52]- The Wire
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- Critic Score
This music's shoreline is made up of instrumental delicacy and subtle arrangements, which burble, froth and foam washing over the listener with an insistent but gentle force. [#257, p.61]- The Wire