- Critic score
- Publication
- By date
-
And Then We Saw Land isn’t a bad album, it just doesn‘t grab you.
-
UncutThere's sparse evidence of their supposedly influential stay in Mali with desert bluesmen Tinariwen here, and ultimately their sonic porridge ends up a tad unsalted. [Mar 2010, p.98]
-
Under The RadarIt's a record which breaks with their previous work in many ways, most noticeably with the absence of singer/songwriter and group founder Sam Genders, but also with its grander, wider sweep. [Winter 2010, p.66]
-
No one should begrudge them their cleaner, smoother sound, but straight-laced songwriting has sapped the band's well-worn eccentricities. Tunng have outgrown and outlasted the restrictive genres they were once boxed into, but Saw Land struggles to find its place in a larger context.
-
The end result is an album that would be fine as a first effort--that is, if it did not naturally have to be compared to previous Tunng albums.