User Score
Universal acclaim- based on 77 Ratings
User score distribution:
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Positive: 70 out of 77
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Mixed: 5 out of 77
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Negative: 2 out of 77
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Feb 9, 2021May not be for everyone, but it is creative, original and honest. That is always a victory.
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Feb 5, 2021Amazing and fresh. Not much else to say. A very great and outstanding record that you can tell will become a tough competition for any new bands that follow a similar style. Enjoyed listening to it the first time, and will only grow stronger as time goes on.
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Feb 7, 2021Album blew me away on first listen, but I was disappointed with the lyric changes, particularly in Athens, France. However, the more you listen and become used to these new lyrics it becomes more familiar and hits all the same boxes they used to and were expected to. A phenomenal album.
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Feb 14, 2021Incredible debut album. I heard Slint, Viagra Boys & Modest Mouse. One of the best post-punk album of the last decades.
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Feb 13, 2021
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Feb 5, 2021
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Jun 30, 2021Amazing first album, so lovely and so fresh to these times! Duration excellent! And we’ll I’m in love about this one!
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Dec 11, 2021
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Feb 16, 2021
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Feb 12, 2021Every song had its own uniqueness to it, and led to an overall solid album, but I'm having a hard time caring.
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Apr 2, 2021One of the best albums I've heard in a while, Just banger after banger. The vocals from Isaac Wood are some of the most unique I have heard from any album I have heard.
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Oct 8, 2022
Awards & Rankings
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Mar 12, 2021For the first time is usually nonsensical, frequently transcendent, and compulsively listenable. Everything that sprung to mind is on the wax here, but BC, NR don’t forget to make it catchy and groovy. In nailing that balance, they’ve given us the year’s first capital-G Great record.
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Feb 9, 2021Their portentous crescendos and surges of Jewish klezmer music set the pace, making post-rock sound improbably carnivalesque. That none of their experiments feel gimmicky speaks to a diverse and inquisitive musicianship.
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Feb 8, 2021If the interplay between the band’s instruments makes gleeful mincemeat of genre, singing guitarist Isaac Wood’s equally remarkable lyrics regularly float to the top of the mix. Half-spoken, half-sung, they riff on granular scene references (“I told you I loved you in front of Black Midi”) and Gen-Z witticisms, but pack in plenty of timeless tenderness and anomie.