Buy Now
- Critic score
- Publication
- By date
-
Jul 7, 2015After all these years, the members of Veruca Salt are like sparks banging into each other, their notes and beats still giving off heavy heat. And ultimately, that is what makes Ghost Notes work.
-
Jul 10, 2015It’s a celebration of the two of them--Post and Gordon, back together, joyous and rocking out, the past behind them.
-
MagnetSep 22, 2015As comebacks go, it's perfect. [No. 124, p.61]
-
Jul 13, 2015Ghost Notes is their most consistent--and consistently enjoyable--album yet.
-
Jul 9, 2015Ghost Notes unsurprisingly reflects (and reflects on) the band’s maturity, but retains the confidence and playfulness that made it an alt-rock touchstone.
-
Jul 8, 2015Gordon and Post haven't missed a beat. In fact, they might be better than ever.
-
Jul 7, 2015It’s been 18 years since the original lineup tackled their original sound, so Ghost Notes slows things down to half the tempo to pretend like nothing has changed. For 14 songs, it’s easy to pretend that’s true.
-
Jul 29, 2015The group's first with its original lineup since 1997, is great by any standard.
-
Jul 13, 2015Sometimes the songwriting relies too heavily on swelling harmonies and crescendos, and occasional lyrical clichés grate.
-
Jul 10, 2015At times, it sounds like they're documenting something far more serious than the turbulent narrative of silly old rock 'n' roll band, like a divorce or missing pet or something, signifying just how much the individuals in this group mean to each other, and how great it feels to have the old gang back together.
-
Jul 9, 2015No longer ghosts, with this strong, same-as-it-ever-was album, Veruca Salt are now full-on zombies, the riffing dead. They don’t wanna go.
-
Jul 7, 2015There’s precious little to pique the listener’s interest.
User score distribution:
-
Positive: 8 out of 10
-
Mixed: 1 out of 10
-
Negative: 1 out of 10
-
Jul 27, 2015
-
Jul 12, 2015
-
Aug 6, 2017