Clinging To A Scheme - The Radio Dept.
Metascore
78 out of 100

Generally favorable reviews - based on 14 Critics

Critic score distribution:
  1. Positive: 11 out of 14
  2. Negative: 0 out of 14
  1. As with their last two albums, Clinging to a Scheme stands to further expand the Radio Dept.'s cult. Economy has never been an issue for the band, but here, things are further tightened up.
  2. Clinging to a Scheme feels more haphazard, more Revolver (1965) than Abbey Road (1969) as it goes from searing ambience ("A Token of Gratitude") to the thicker-figured dance tracks. The album leaves you wanting more--whether this is for better or worse is one question you'll have to answer for yourself.
  3. Whether by design or evolution, The Radio Dept's third album fits the grand scheme of all things voguish and hazy rather perfectly--though that's not to say they've made a faultless record, as 'Clinging To A Scheme' arguably hangs from just a few songs.
  4. It's a surprise that the band managed to get through those weird four years and make such a consistent album--from front to back it's exceptionally well sequenced.
  5. The Radio Dept. have cleverly managed to conjure up music with a thoroughly minimal feel, despite this hive of activity instrumentation-wise.
  6. Further spins reveal the charms of the non-single tracks, and the whole thing ends up being one of the best examples of all the things that help make Swedish pop so magical. For once, all the pre-release hype and anticipation has been justified; the Radio Dept. have delivered the best work of their career.
  7. Ultimately, this is the same Radio Dept. we know, love and hardly ever hear from. We'll take what we can get.
  8. This is a solid, feel-good winner of an album that applies enough variety to feature in a number of your day to day routines and make them that much more special by association.
  9. If Clinging is at all a departure from the Radio Dept.'s previous pleasantries, it's along the two most valuable vectors: outward and upward. Although their sound has always seemed certain, it's never been this clear.
  10. It's somethng fans are sure to enjoy. [Winter 2010, p.65]
  11. Emerging at the end, the listener has a real sense of having been immersed in something coherent and whole over the course of the 10 tracks; even if at the same time--dreamlike--there may well be no such clear sense of what it all might have meant.
  12. A four-year wait is inexcusable, especially when more than half of the album exudes familiarity.
  13. Immaculately crafted, and with a smattering of good songs, it's also disappointingly samey, with all too little standing out and demanding to be heard. [May 2010, p.125]
  14. The Radio Dept. are comfortable in their safety, the masters of indie pop/shoegaze fence-sitting, neither here nor there in message or meaning. It's a stance they've refined with each release and Clinging to a Scheme rocks back and forth cautiously over a safety net of the softest cotton, never in any danger of losing its footing in the first place.
User Score

Universal acclaim- based on 12 Ratings

User score distribution:
  1. Positive: 1 out of 1
  2. Mixed: 0 out of 1
  3. Negative: 0 out of 1
  1. AlbertoF.
    10
    It's so soft, so beautiful... just perfect, the Thurstoon Moore's sample is so awesome too.