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The Fountain
EMAILPRINTby Echo & The Bunnymen

Mixed or average reviews
Based on 15 critic reviews
How did we calculate this?
Based on 14 votes
Read user comments
Rate this album >
Album Info
Label: Ocean Tours Ltd
Release Date: 10 November 2009
Discs: 1 disc
Genre(s): Rock
Summary
The first studio album in four years for the British rock band was produced with John McLaughlin and Simon Perry.
Also By This Artist: Flowers Siberia
Also On The Web: Official Artist Site
What The Critics Said
All critic scores are converted to a 100-point scale. If a critic does not indicate a score, we assign a score based on the general impression given by the text of the review. Learn more...
The Guardian
Their most accessible offering in a long time sees Ian McCulloch at his most lyrically playful and cocksure, hovering between confessional ("I cried a fountain dry") and mischievous, and firing off one-liners as if it were the band's 80s heyday.
Read Full Review >Alternative Press
On The Fountain, the Liverpool, England, legends shake off the sluggish tempos of their recent albums in favor of brisk, vibrant pop songs. [Jan 2010, p. 94]
Under The Radar
The Fountain owes much of its sound to that unremitting 1987 pop fest, and the album's best moments play like forgotten singles from the group's '80s commercial heyday, only with a prouder emphasis on guitarist Will Sergeant. [Fall 2009, p.58]
Filter
The Fountain is replete with shimmering, flaw-repellant pop, all glorious melodies and gorgeous atmospherics; and while Will Sargent's feral guitar hounds are kept tightly leashed, Ian McCulloch rattle off couplets and takes us to dizzying heights of piercing sadness and grown-up romantic longing. [Holiday 2009, p. 93]
Pitchfork
Ultimately, The Fountain is an echo of an echo, inessential to all but the band's most devoted followers.
Read Full Review >New Musical Express (NME)
‘Think I Need It Too’, the best thing they’ve done in ages. And yet, much as we want to love it, the rest is a pulled punch.
Read Full Review >All Music Guide
Maybe it would be easier to give The Fountain the benefit of the doubt if it hadn't been preceded by four similar efforts, or if singer Ian McCulloch hadn't spent the band's entire career unabashedly proclaiming their genius and preeminence in the rock world, but that's a lot of "if" to work with.
Read Full Review >Q Magazine
The 11th Bunnymen album is a reminder that the elegiac guitars and uplifting choruses of indie rock were invented by this band way back in the ealy '80s. [Nov 2009, p.104]
Uncut
Buffed to a hyper-compressed, anodyne sheen by John McLaughlin, The Fountain is so craven in its bid for airplay it even includes an insipid number called "Drivetime". [Nov 2009, p.84]
Tiny Mix Tapes
For all of their wonderful contributions to modern pop music, McCulloch and Sergeant aspired for too much this time around.
Read Full Review >PopMatters
To avoid risking further embarrassment and degradation of their impressive legacy, McCulloch and Sergeant need to consider making The Fountain the final Echo & the Bunnymen album. Because on the evidence here, they don’t have another comeback in them.
Read Full Review >musicOMH.com
After 30 years since their first incarnation, has the flowing fountain of creative inspiration finally run dry for the Bunnymen?
Read Full Review >Mojo
Twenty-five years after their creative peak, it seems as essential a purchase as a book of new jokes from Bobby Darvo. [Nov 2009, p.91]
Slant Magazine
In the end, it's not the occasional missteps that mar The Fountain so much as its consummate, consistent mediocrity.
Read Full Review >What Our Users Said
The average user rating for this album is 7.4 (out of 10) based on 14 User Votes
Note: User votes are NOT included in the Metascore calculation.
Patrick S gave it an8:
I like it. A fun excursion with the Bunnymen.
Joe H gave it a2:
Sadly a tired, stale, formulaic simulation of a once-legendary band.
Todd C. gave it a9:
Tracks 1-7 and 10 get better and better everytime you here them. A classic it will be, if The Fountain gets enough air play it should work it's magic on the newer generation. It's catchy lyrics and up beats has me rock'en again like back in the 80's when they first can to the U.S.
