Era Vulgaris - Queens of the Stone Age
Metascore
75 out of 100

Generally favorable reviews - based on 33 Critics

Critic score distribution:
  1. Positive: 27 out of 33
  2. Negative: 1 out of 33
  1. 100
    They continue to find some clever ways to do a pretty dumb thing. [Jul 2007, p.112]
  2. It's exhilarating, the best rock & roll record yet released in 2007.
  3. 90
    It sounds awesome. [Jul 2007, p.102]
  4. 86
    It's still rebellion without destination. [#25, p.89]
  5. You can hear the band rediscovering its footing as one of the strangest, funniest, and best acts of the decade.
  6. Era sounds like an effort to pull away from commercial radio and actually cultivate a smaller, indie-er fan base.
  7. Josh Homme wants Era Vulgaris to be your summer bonfire record. And with a restored aura of cockiness and predictably massive arsenal of riffage, he's once again fulfilled his goal.
  8. Spiky and cool where 'Songs For The Deaf' was smooth and tanned, tense and alien where that record was baked and ready to party, 'Era Vulgaris' is a record that feels like rust and stings like battery acid.
  9. The Queens' music has always been a kind of battleground for the proverbial devil and angel on Homme's shoulders – with the devil winning, of course – and that continues to be the case here, with Homme's bewitching falsetto croon acting as the spirit to the band's tattooed, hairy flesh, and bruising, cactus-dry workouts giving way to lush, psychedelic oases of darkly reflective sound.
  10. Era Vulgaris is Homme's fifth Queens album, and like the others, it's intricately crafted, meticulously polished and ruthlessly efficient in its pursuit of depraved rock thrills.
  11. Homme's modern macabre lyricism and experimental, melodic prowess... make this a more complete album that Lullabies. [Jul 2007, p.176]
  12. Though QOTSA always seem to be on bland-rock stations, this is as different from the mainstream as you can imagine, and not in a bad way.
  13. Homme's ever-catchy formula remains, but the mood is uneasy and brooding, with tracks such as 'Sick, Sick, Sick' revealing a venomous new band that's finally learned to separate business and pleasure.
  14. On this album he decisively shakes off the enervation and jokey detachment that made the Queens' last few albums sound like in-jokes. This time Mr. Homme hones his songs.
  15. Slick, sly, hard-hitting, and intelligent, Era Vulgaris is the rare big record with staying power.
  16. If Lullabies To Paralyze was a strange forest fairytale dusted with desert blues courtesy of Billy Gibbons, Era Vulgaris finds the band holed up in an abandoned funkhouse in the centre of a shady copse, waiting for some strange sexually-contracted fever to pass.
  17. "Era Vulgaris" ain't vulgar at all - in fact it's musicianly as heck.
  18. So when Era Vulgaris comes as a bit of a disappointment, well, that's all relative, since it still rocks mightily.
  19. Not content with making a diverse, punchy record brimming with those trademark riffs, Homme has written lyrics that make you think.
  20. The Queens treading water is still better than watching so many others horribly drowning.
  21. QOTSA envelops many of the songs in a fog of menacing guitar squall that focuses as much on atmospherics as hooks. [16 Jun 2007]
  22. While Era Vulgaris is not cohesive in tone (Could it be a reflection of today's fragmented, compartmentalized world that pulls in all directions?) and doesn't fire consistently on all cylinders, the album is still chock-a-block with complex instrumental arrangements, stop-and- start rhythms, gracefully refined harmonies, cranked-up choruses, and pointed commentary on the modern world.
  23. Somehow, it all works together, from the psychedelic guitar warble to the bits of prog to the almost country-style harmonies.
  24. "Era Vulgaris" is dense and loud, and though there are hooks beneath the grimy surface, they're not always immediately apparent. Yet with enough patience, you'll find these tunes burrowing in a little deeper each time through the record.
  25. This time around things are more industrial and complex but every bit as sleazy and intoxicating.
  26. Era Vulgaris gets better with each listen, and that's mostly due to the fact that the melodies take time to sink in.
  27. It's not so much that the songs themselves are weak, just that many of the choices made in them are.
  28. In isolation you can imagine any of these songs may have appeared over the last 10 years giving a warm comforting feel, but listened in its entirety the effect is strangely soporific, a steady morphine drip running from start to end.
  29. All the beefy guitar playing in the world can't change the reality that there isn't a single song here that you'll remember, or what to return to, two summers hence. [15 Jun 2007, p.78]
  30. At best, the songs give you a brief QOTSA kick, and at worst, the album sounds like warmed up Eagles. [Summer 2007, p.84]
  31. 50
    A downer. [Jul 2007, p.116]
  32. There has always been a slightly tricksy, proggy side to Queens of the Stone Age, but here the more episodic songs such as Run Pig Run lurch distractingly rather than flow. The result is more of a trudge than Queens of the Stone Age albums are supposed to be, not helped by the fact that Homme seems to have mislaid his lyrical wit.
  33. With the band sounding listless and drained of ideas, it starts trying anything.
User Score

Universal acclaim- based on 119 Ratings

User score distribution:
  1. Positive: 77 out of 87
  2. Negative: 4 out of 87
  1. TomB
    10
    The best album of the decade. I know it's a weak decade but I would rank this album along side Surfer Rosa, Siamese Dream, and Daydream Nation. The riff for 3s and 7s reminisces of the lone, cutting perfection of the opening seconds of Smells Like Teen Spirit. Full Review »
  2. 6
    You will struggle to love this album. But buy it if you preferred Lullabies To Paralyze to Songs For The Deaf. I thoroughly enjoy the dark atmosphere of this thing... Metallic, dirty, screeching guitar sounds try to fill the whole made by Josh Homme's lack of new riffs and although I wouldn't describe the album as a "dissapointment" I don't love it like I loved previous QotSA albums. Hopefully the queens new album out sometime this year will satisfy my hunger for more hard rock. In the meantime, buy Them Crooked Vultures' self-titled album - not this. Full Review »
  3. j30
    7
    Good album from a great band. I was blown away by their earlier work (QOTSA, Rated R, and Songs for the Deaf), nothing has been nearly as good since then. This feels like they're trying to reinvent themselves and I'll be interested to hear where they go from here. Full Review »