• Record Label: Nonesuch
  • Release Date: Apr 1, 2014
Metascore
80

Generally favorable reviews - based on 7 Critic Reviews

Critic score distribution:
  1. Positive: 6 out of 7
  2. Negative: 0 out of 7
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  1. Apr 1, 2014
    83
    It’s a ready-made best-of album, superb in execution but light on surprises--the major exception being the new-wave-inflected speed-folk of the percussive Mother Mother cover “Hayloft.”
  2. Apr 1, 2014
    82
    Not merely a product of maturity, Nickel Creek has grown without losing its palpable joy or wondrous ability to make musicianship as accessible as the engaging way their voices draw listeners to them.
  3. Apr 7, 2014
    80
    While they might not be better than ever, they’re at least what they once were and what they’ve always been in the collective memory: instrumental virtuosos and sophisticated songsmiths, all the while finding a way to make it look easy.
  4. Apr 1, 2014
    80
    The time away has done the California-spawned group good, as the conversation is familiar--intricate instrumental phrasing, pristine harmonies--but also full of fresh energy that lends everything from the buoyant gospel bluegrass of “21st of May” to the joyously bleary “Rest of My Life” an air of excitement.
  5. Apr 1, 2014
    80
    A Dotted Line is a work of supreme songcraft; one might call it a “return to form”, but from the sound of it, the form was never gone in the first place.
  6. Apr 1, 2014
    70
    If there isn't much spark, there is a surplus of warmth; the trio is comfortable and relaxed, and it's hard not to succumb to such friendly, familiar vibes.
User Score
7.5

Generally favorable reviews- based on 4 Ratings

User score distribution:
  1. Positive: 3 out of 4
  2. Mixed: 0 out of 4
  3. Negative: 1 out of 4
  1. Jan 30, 2015
    3
    Yet again NC produces an album of unintelligible lyrics and a sound that gets ever-further from the bluegrass roots that hooked so many fans.Yet again NC produces an album of unintelligible lyrics and a sound that gets ever-further from the bluegrass roots that hooked so many fans. It started with This Side and went downhill from there. Full Review »