• Record Label: Matador
  • Release Date: Aug 24, 2004
Metascore
73

Generally favorable reviews - based on 22 Critic Reviews

Critic score distribution:
  1. Positive: 18 out of 22
  2. Negative: 0 out of 22
  1. Even though Half Smiles of the Decomposed sounds great, the band plays with impressive skill, and it represents one of Pollard's most successful attempts to balance his low-fi musical impulses against the demands of proper record production, it lacks the ineffable fire and energy that has always set their best work apart.
  2. The album isn't a certified classic like earlier GBV favorites "Alien Lanes" and "Under the Bushes, Under the Stars," but it does have a healthy dollop of Pollard's trademark effortless pop perfection.
  3. As a pure, balls-out rock n' roll record, Half Smiles of the Decomposed is certianly on par with the likes of Isolation Drills and Universal Truths and Cycles.
  4. Those whose expected Pollard to bow out in a blaze of lo-fi glory will be sorely disappointed, but true fans will recognize just how well the mid-fi approach suits Pollard.
  5. One of the highlights of their career.
  6. Filter
    82
    It's ultimately a pop album, reflective and thoughtful, and these songs are just that: songs. [#12, p.97]
  7. Too much of Half Smiles of the Decomposed, however, does not rock.
  8. New Musical Express (NME)
    80
    The best Guided By Voices album yet. [28 Aug 2004, p.57]
  9. The mediocre filler that rounds out Half Smiles' lineup is, sadly, par for the band's late-era course.
  10. In essence Half Smiles of the Decomposed is more overloaded with ideas and styles than any other recent Guided by Voices album, yet the songs still hold together cohesively and the album actually gains in depth from the variety.
  11. Q Magazine
    70
    Finds GBV playing to their long-standing strengths. [Oct 2004, p.124]
  12. Rolling Stone
    70
    Like many of the band's best, it's packed to bursting with sometimes inscrutable pleasures. [16 Sep 2004, p.79]
  13. True to form, there's a fair amount of unexploded duds mixed in with the direct hits.
  14. Half Smiles of the Decomposed isn't quite the guns-blazing finale I always imagined the last GBV album would be, but it never becomes a limp-wristed approximation of the band in any of its previous guises.
  15. Though lacking in innovation, the final GBV album will please any longtime fan that prefers “Game of Pricks” to “Chicken Blows”. Pollard’s songwriting finally feels consistent, fully realized and commanding.
  16. Uncut
    70
    As a send-off... it's not quite the full parade. [Sep 2004, p.104]
  17. Under The Radar
    80
    A more pop-oriented approach, with acoustic textures and melancholic tendencies that recall some of the band's finer work. [#7]
User Score
7.6

Generally favorable reviews- based on 18 Ratings

User score distribution:
  1. Positive: 16 out of 18
  2. Mixed: 0 out of 18
  3. Negative: 2 out of 18
  1. Apr 6, 2018
    7
    An average, yet strong release from Guided By Voices. With low filler and some great tracks I would have given this album a 7.5 instead ofAn average, yet strong release from Guided By Voices. With low filler and some great tracks I would have given this album a 7.5 instead of 7.0. Overall, a good album for the band to depart on until 2012s Let's Go Eat the Factory. Full Review »
  2. aaronL
    Jan 14, 2007
    7
    Overall this record has a darker, more introspective feel than most GbV stuff, and the more progressive-influenced songwriting feels out of Overall this record has a darker, more introspective feel than most GbV stuff, and the more progressive-influenced songwriting feels out of character for the group. Easily this is the least essential GbV record, but at the same time it is so intrieguing - mostly because it's so different. Full Review »
  3. RA
    Aug 18, 2005
    8
    It's not my favorite GVB album, but there are a few solid tracks. I'm not disappointed because Bob Pollard will continue to write It's not my favorite GVB album, but there are a few solid tracks. I'm not disappointed because Bob Pollard will continue to write songs and perform. Luck for us as we are in rock's nadir. Full Review »