• Record Label: 4AD
  • Release Date: Dec 4, 2012
User Score
7.7

Generally favorable reviews- based on 32 Ratings

User score distribution:
  1. Positive: 24 out of 32
  2. Negative: 6 out of 32
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  1. Dec 13, 2012
    10
    An album that has made this year completely worth it in terms of music. It is an elegant painting, with Scott as the artist. Lyrically, the album is extremely comprehensive. Don't expect to understand these lyrics unless you're well read. Even if you aren't well read you can just as easily look up the various unfamiliar terms and references Scott makes throughout this masterpiece. TheAn album that has made this year completely worth it in terms of music. It is an elegant painting, with Scott as the artist. Lyrically, the album is extremely comprehensive. Don't expect to understand these lyrics unless you're well read. Even if you aren't well read you can just as easily look up the various unfamiliar terms and references Scott makes throughout this masterpiece. The music, however, can easily be appreciated through analysis of it's complex composition and unique use of various instruments. The percussion is especially of high quality here, and while many people were worried with Scott's use of various synthesizers and heavy guitar riffs on this album, they work great. The strings, as usual, are fantastic. This album is worthy of carrying the name "Bosch" as it's title, it is a portrait in itself, various pictures and images of humanities tyrannies, sins, and addictions. Scott shows us how it really is, in a cynical manner to be expected of the man who once sung songs about Gonorrhea and Dictators. The images and pictures may seem disconnected at first, but much like Bosch's paintings they come together to form one beautiful piece. Expand
  2. Dec 4, 2012
    10
    He has broken the cycle. It is only 6 years since The Drift, 5 years earlier than expected. It is monumental, difficult, demanding, baffling, impossible and opaque everything to be expected from a Scott Walker record. It is also wondrous. The fact is exists and is released is incredible. I could give it 0 or 10, but it has to be a 10, because it must be heard at least once.
  3. Dec 26, 2012
    2
    With all due respect to Scott Walker's body of work but this is the most overrated album of the year-extremely exhausting listening experience with almost none of the payoff.Hope he 'll start to write songs again one day soon instead of these quasi-avantgarde exercises in self-importance.
  4. Dec 8, 2012
    1
    Even if this record is a clever one, it is, first of all, a boring one. It is hardly possible to listen to it through at one occasion and, moreover, after one time I could not find any will to listen again. Critics have probably listened to another record. This one is really bad.
  5. Feb 26, 2013
    0
    I loved The Drift and Tilt, but this album was literally full of farting noises, yo mama jokes, and cacophonous and aimless noises masquerading as songs that sound like a Scott Walker parody by a particularly unfunny comedian.
  6. Jan 27, 2014
    5
    it's odd, I'l give you that. And horrendously difficult to listen to at the best of times, and sometimes, in the nicest way possible, a little humorous, for the odd and random lyrics and... um, noises, particularly on track 2. And alot of the tracks on this album go on a little too long than they should really, but I am not counting out that at times, Bisch Bosch can be an entertainingit's odd, I'l give you that. And horrendously difficult to listen to at the best of times, and sometimes, in the nicest way possible, a little humorous, for the odd and random lyrics and... um, noises, particularly on track 2. And alot of the tracks on this album go on a little too long than they should really, but I am not counting out that at times, Bisch Bosch can be an entertaining listen, and a pleasing one as well. But Bisch Bosch is unfortunately a bit of an unnecessary album. Expand
  7. Jan 9, 2013
    10
    Some seem eager to dismiss Bish Bosch as trite and pretentious. But this album is hilarious as much as it is disturbing or nontraditional in the context of popular music. I think it fits well in the Walker canon and shows compositional and lyrical continuity with his body of work, even early songs like Plastic Palace People and The Amorous Humphrey Plugg he wrote on 'Scott 2' from 1968.Some seem eager to dismiss Bish Bosch as trite and pretentious. But this album is hilarious as much as it is disturbing or nontraditional in the context of popular music. I think it fits well in the Walker canon and shows compositional and lyrical continuity with his body of work, even early songs like Plastic Palace People and The Amorous Humphrey Plugg he wrote on 'Scott 2' from 1968. Granted, the humor found throughout in the lyrics and musical juxtaposition is not the same postmodern smirky sort more typical to today's popular music idiom (save maybe Zappa). But Walker's humor and crassness, alternately veiled and explicit, is in a vein related to continentals like Brecht, Weill, Brel, Heiner Müller (or Satie's occasionally obscene piece titles) and even the dirty puns of part-time ex-pat Cole Porter. I wouldn't want to predicate evaluating or enjoying this album on trying to decipher if it's a put-on, a prank, or "Art," which ultimately doesn't matter. Listen at face value. Enjoy the rich helpings of words, puns, jokes, and sounds. The album is well recorded. The musical textures and timbres are rich. Even when the music is sparse, the atmosphere is thick--he previously studied classical and contemporary music and Gregorian chant. His previous 2007 ballet composition "And who shall go to the ball?" is also a worthwhile instrumental listen. Walker's performance on Bish Bosch is expressionistic and theatrical. It evokes word and sound collage images of pain, cruelty, irrationality, and banality, in addition to being very, very funny. Expand
  8. Jan 6, 2016
    8
    There is only one word to describe this album: weird...

    If "The Drift" was an modern avant garde horror pop opera, then "Bish Bosch" is it's wacky experimental cousin. Walker experiments a lot with repetition, instrumental minimalism and mixing strange opposite sounds and ideas on this record. The intro song "See you don't bump his head" makes this clear featuring a repeating drum beat
    There is only one word to describe this album: weird...

    If "The Drift" was an modern avant garde horror pop opera, then "Bish Bosch" is it's wacky experimental cousin. Walker experiments a lot with repetition, instrumental minimalism and mixing strange opposite sounds and ideas on this record. The intro song "See you don't bump his head" makes this clear featuring a repeating drum beat with Scott's crooning vocals on top of them, while being exposed to shots of noise and a ethereal synthesizer.

    "Corps de Blah" and "SDSS1416+13B (Zercon, A Flagpole Sitter)" and "Dimple" give a nice twist on the sound Walker experimented with on "The Drift".

    The album's absolute highlight is definitely the lead single "Epizootics!" a nice heavy, thick, experimental jazz romp that I simply cannot resist to dance to. "It's dense. Tense. Unseen through pound for pound" as Walker sings over one the freaking perfect drum breakdowns I have heard.

    Like I said in my Le1f - "Riot Boi" review, some experiments can fail. There are some tracks that couldn't quite match the quality of some of the other tracks. E.g. "Tar".

    "Bish Bosch" is a rough listen given how wacky and abstract it is. But I don't think that Mr. Walker wanted to be highbrow and smart on this record. Yes the album has it's dark spots, but it manages to sound incredibly playful. It almost has this childish charm to it. Just read into the lyrics of some of these tracks and you'll most likely understand.

    Fav Tracks: See You Don't Bump His Head, Epizootics!, Dimple, The Day The "Conducator" Died
    Least Fav Tracks: Tar
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Metascore
78

Generally favorable reviews - based on 33 Critic Reviews

Critic score distribution:
  1. Positive: 28 out of 33
  2. Negative: 2 out of 33
  1. 30
    How anyone outside the walls of a mental asylum could genuinely enjoy the annoyingly repetitive industrial drum-throbs, aimless experimento-guitar crunches and lyrics about "reeking gonads" that characterise songs called things like 'Epizootics!' is beyond me.
  2. Jan 2, 2013
    70
    Bish Bosch is as much about challenging the people that absorbed and accepted Tilt and The Drift as it is challenging the rest of the world--and while that makes it consistent with all his work since Nite Flights, each subsequent album giving his fan base another hurdle to overcome, it also gives it a thrill that's unique to both his discography and the majority of the music you could compare it to. If, indeed, there is any.
  3. Dec 20, 2012
    80
    Bish Bosch is a wilder, more scattered (and scatty, in the case of Epizootics!, ten minutes of sax-driven jazz which could almost be seen as accessible, if it wasn't so dark and threatening) work than its immediate predecessors.