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Tarot Sport

Universal acclaim
Based on 21 critic reviews
How did we calculate this?
Based on 42 votes
Read user comments
Rate this album >
Album Info
Label: ATP
Release Date: 20 October 2009
Discs: 1 disc
Genre(s): Rock, Experimental
Summary
The second album for the rock duo from Bristol was produced by Andrew Weatherall.
Also By This Artist: Street Horrrsing
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 Onion (A.V. Club)
For most of the songs amassed here, it still takes around 10 minutes to get the job done--threading those thick synthesizer blasts and all that skittering digital manna through a brick wall of guitar fuzz--but Fuck Buttons succeeds at turning its unpredictable epics into masterpieces of pacing and strange beauty.
Read Full Review >Drowned In Sound
Tarot Sport doesn’t pause to bang or whimper. Tarot Sport accelerates.
Read Full Review >musicOMH.com
And such are the music's joyous highs, subtle thrills and rich and deep layers, they can undoubtedly be judged one of the most worthwhile and special bands currently at large.
Read Full Review >Pitchfork
"Street Horrrsing" was a great record, but Tarot Sport is a cut above. Perhaps surprisingly, it's also a welcoming album--and one of the best of this already fruitful year.
Read Full Review >Urb
Tarot Sport goes far beyond it's sonically daunting reaches and succeeds at being a deeply emotional experience.
Read Full Review >Lost At Sea
While the celestial exploration is briefly juxtaposed with sci-fi experimentation on the Autechre-like 'Rough Steez' and 'Phantom Limb,' those detours only here to provide respite from and not actually disrupt an ultimately delightful, delirious headtrip designed to push your fuckest of buttons.
Read Full Review >Paste Magazine
The album as a whole, though uneasy listening, is big, powerful, and often overwhelming.
Read Full Review >All Music Guide
A more hypnotic and lulling ride overall, Tarot Sport may lack some of "Street Horrrsing's" pure visceral impact, but it's just as satisfying on its own terms, as well as an impressive step forward for Fuck Buttons.
Read Full Review >Mojo
If "Street Horrsing" was a bit of a lark, then Tarot Sport plays an altogether more serious game. [Nov 2009, p.92]
Q Magazine
With Tarot Sport, Fuck Buttons have made a career-defining album that will resonate with anyone who has ever spent a night with their head in the speaker stacks and gone home marvelling at the ringing in their ears. [Nov 2009, p.106]
New Musical Express (NME)
Whereas Mogwai’s more recent work threatens to make a formula familiar, Fuck Buttons’ fizzling DIY laboratory still has the invention and ingenuity to surprise.
Read Full Review >The Guardian
Fuck Buttons have less in common with the overly cerebral noise boffins they're compared to and more with the likes of Ennio Morricone: sonic explorers mapping out the landscape's emotional terrain, albeit one that exists in some far-off galaxy.
Read Full Review >Tiny Mix Tapes
For about an hour, if you can allow Fuck Buttons to control your responses, to embrace the clusterfuck of noise and emotion, then Tarot Sport might be one of the strongest albums of this year.
Read Full Review >Slant Magazine
Tarot Sport makes its mark: easy and challenging at the same time, a mix of harsh and smooth sounds that mirrors the prickly juxtaposition of classic jazz.
Read Full Review >Dot Music
As much U2, New Order and Jan Hammer as they are The Field, Harmonia and Black Dice, ultimately F*ck Buttons are in a league of their own--and with Tarot Sport, they just bettered themselves.
Read Full Review >Uncut
Andrew Weatherall has been employed to help build Tarot Sport a beaty backbone and the results are brutally mesmerizing. [Nov 2009, p. 88]
Filter
Tarot Sport's tunes don't really explode so much as they unfurl into synthetic washes of digital soundtracking that undulate with electricity before elvolving into narcotic beat castles. [Holiday 2009, p.99]
PopMatters
There are, however, occasional stumbles that suggest that some lessons cannot be learned quickly, and that melody is an essential component of their sound that needs more attention. For now, though, this is much better.
Read Full Review >Dusted Magazine
The main problem with Tarot Sport is that it sometimes seems to be trying too hard, building drama into repetitive riffs by sheer force, urging greater and greater effort on listeners who are already a bit out of breath.
Read Full Review >Under The Radar
Tarot Sport is an act of patience that pays back the time you actively spend with it. [Fall 2009, p.58]
No Ripcord
The album definitely has its moments, and the first half is very engaging, but they lose it in the long run.
Read Full Review >What Our Users Said
The average user rating for this album is 7.9 (out of 10) based on 42 User Votes
Note: User votes are NOT included in the Metascore calculation.
C H gave it a10:
Just amazing stuff...really bringing drone back into the discussion when it comes to electronica genres. Great.
Curtis B gave it a9:
Excellently recorded. Carefully crafted. Beautiful symphonies of noise.
Kendo J gave it a10:
Raw, unrefined, genius. Absolutely brilliant.
aaron T gave it a9:
Nice album. Builds up to some great moments, and is making my essay writing easier!
Monty C. gave it a9:
Electronic Post-Rock. Perfect background noise, yet ballsy enough to take the foreground.
Thomas V gave it a9:
The opening notes of Surf Solar took me back to the 70's Klaus Schulze and then charges forward. The Fuck Buttons combine old school electronic washes, power electronics muscle with crunchy beats and opaque rythms. The Lisbon Maru, with its military march recalls Vangelis' To The Unknown Man. I dig the rhythmic jerkiness of Phantom Limb. They've gone for the big beat and left the wonderful denseness of OK, Let's Talk About Magic behind.
Pete J gave it a9:
This is a stunning album, a very addictive fresh sound. I thought it might not have much substance or longevity but I was wrong, I can`t get bored of this beautiful tribal psychedelic noise classic.
