Metascore
78

Generally favorable reviews - based on 27 Critic Reviews

Critic score distribution:
  1. Positive: 23 out of 27
  2. Negative: 0 out of 27
  1. That Employment is derivative is both undeniable and irrelevant. It is so confident, so smart, so full of life, that a more enjoyable 45 minutes is hard to imagine.
  2. Kaiser Chiefs flow so well that even given the nonstop electro-like riffs, hooks, and knowingly cornball solos played by guitarist Whitey, the songs as a group can over-egg the pudding as only powerpop can. But as a record-making matter, Employment is nearly without flaws.
  3. Employment is thrilling from beginning to end, packing in 45-minutes of exuberant Britpop melodies, na-na-na choruses and buzzsaw guitars that make Franz Ferdinand look like a bunch of stiffs.
  4. Spin
    83
    Frontman Ricky Wilson is an average singer but an extraordinary melodist. [May 2005, p.102]
  5. Blender
    80
    [Kaiser Chiefs] are smug, preening and shallow, and so eager to entertain that they nearly piss themselves with pizzazz and energy. [Apr 2005, p.119]
  6. Uncut
    80
    A gem. [Apr 2005, p.105]
  7. Try not to worry too much about where it comes from, or who else it may or may not sound like. Instead, enjoy a record that is quintessentially British, without pretension and most importantly, a whole lot of fun.
  8. Essentially, 'Employment' is a very British record; an entirely Britpop creation spawned ten years after the event.
  9. They develop, mutate, and swell in confidence until you’re faced with the last thing you expected - finally, a worthy successor to Blur.
  10. This is an not an album designed for navel gazing introspection, but rather one to be played at neighbor-annoying volumes before you hit the town on a Friday night.
  11. At least until that new Coldplay record drops, the Kaiser Chiefs have positioned themselves to hold the title of Baddest Musicians in the World With a British Return Address.
  12. The Kaiser Chiefs make you want to sing along with practically every song by the second chorus.
  13. Mojo
    80
    Smelts the classic rock canon (Madness, Blur, Bowie, Small Faces) into an infectious, head-spinning punch. [May 2005, p.109]
  14. Urb
    80
    They have a clever way with words and pleasantly surprising musical depth. [May 2005, p.92]
  15. Alternative Press
    80
    Kaiser Chiefs melt their influences into something entirely non-derivative--and thoroughly fun. [May 2005, p.172]
  16. Entertainment Weekly
    75
    Certainly makes for a fun time. [8 Apr 2005, p.64]
  17. Los Angeles Times
    75
    It's also a nice change of pace that the Chiefs avoid the '80s post-punk clichés so much in fashion with their peers, though you have to wonder about the instincts of a band that leads off with its most gimmicky and least involving songs and buries its best toward the end. [10 Apr 2005]
  18. Employment feels more like a patchwork collage of past Brit-rock stardom... than a fully-formed statement of their own. But maybe that's missing the point. When a band has this much fun and crackles with this much energy, you don't ask questions.
  19. Employment is an uneven but still very promising debut that suggests that one day the Kaiser Chiefs will pull off something even more ambitious.
  20. There are no bad songs on Employment. There are maybe a couple not-good ones toward the end, but even those are so tightly wound and polished they could end up lodged in your head for days.
  21. A mini-compendium of Britpop from the '60s to now.
  22. It's deadly entertaining in bursts-- especially if you pick out the right bursts.
  23. Kaiser Chiefs manage find their footing early on and this success forgives them their meanderings later on the disc.
  24. Q Magazine
    60
    Employment is an album that demands furious scrawls of red pen in the margins. [Apr 2005, p.120]
  25. Under The Radar
    60
    The rest of the album, however, never quite lives up to the manic energy of "Riot." [#9]
  26. This is the kind of post punk that loves The Specials and XTC rather than Wire and Joy Division.
  27. If Franz Ferdinand were Pearl Jam, these guys would be the Stone Temple Pilots.
User Score
7.9

Generally favorable reviews- based on 89 Ratings

User score distribution:
  1. Positive: 74 out of 89
  2. Negative: 5 out of 89
  1. May 28, 2019
    8
    Kaiser Chiefs produced some of the best songs of the 2000s, starting with "I Predict a Riot" and "Oh My God". The band created their own nicheKaiser Chiefs produced some of the best songs of the 2000s, starting with "I Predict a Riot" and "Oh My God". The band created their own niche capturing a combination rock, electronic and some folk while having fun on each track. Full Review »
  2. May 14, 2012
    10
    Amazing best album of the 2000s it just takes Punk gives it a modern spins puts in a bit of quirky Kaiser Chiefs magic and makes in greatAmazing best album of the 2000s it just takes Punk gives it a modern spins puts in a bit of quirky Kaiser Chiefs magic and makes in great there would be no audience for bands like Arctic Monkeys and Vaccines if this didn't hit as punk died out. Full Review »
  3. Feb 8, 2012
    8
    2005 and Blur style Britpop (same producer) returned in the shape of Kaiser Chiefs. While I don't rate what they put out since this record,2005 and Blur style Britpop (same producer) returned in the shape of Kaiser Chiefs. While I don't rate what they put out since this record, they deserve a lot of credit for this one. Its got a handful of hit singles, another bunch of sing along album tracks, great lyrics throughout and only the very occasional disappointing track. One of these albums that you can't listen to very often, but when you blow the dust of it and give it a whirl, it's still got the same charm as when it first came out. Full Review »