• Record Label: Domino
  • Release Date: Mar 2, 2010
Metascore
83

Universal acclaim - based on 27 Critic Reviews

Critic score distribution:
  1. Positive: 25 out of 27
  2. Negative: 0 out of 27
  1. Dec 10, 2010
    100
    Hidden is not just the most original record to emerge from Britain this year, but the most unfathomable: an immaculate enigma.
  2. It's genuinely surprising, beautifully wrought and announces TNP as one of the most powerful artistic forces in Britain today.
  3. Despite the handful of standout tracks, what makes Hidden unique is the way it flows as a cohesive whole.
  4. Showing clear progression and monumental ambition, TNP have crafted a stark and dense knockout performance.
  5. Hidden backs up some audacious conceits with studious application and winds up a major achievement from these po-faced sentinels of the secret history.
  6. Barnett's blue-sky dreaming is actually a pretty accurate description of Hidden – heavily beat-driven, almost entirely absent of guitars, and laced with large amounts of elaborately arranged woodwind and brass. Does it work? Largely, yes.
  7. Hidden, the young British group's sophomore full-length, was made much in the same vein as 2007's Beat Pyramid, but at times it's even less coherent.
  8. Hidden is a strikingly inventive and original rock record. Granted, nothing is ever completely new in pop music, but the album freshly synthesizes older ideas (post-rock textures, no-wave skronk, Steve Reich-influenced phasing) and current trends (dubstep's delay, chart pop's stentorian synth lines, global beats).
  9. Seldom have classical delicacy, rock attitude and pop vitality coexisted with such improbable ease.
  10. You know, deep down, that the These New Puritans set is the one that you'll be listening to in a decade, enjoying the fact that you can never quite decipher its codes, and probably being amazed at how many more commercially successful records it inspired.
  11. Pretentious? Undoubtedly. Overblown? Yes, of course it is, but we expected nothing less.
  12. Ultimately, Hidden is the sound of an ambitious young band as eager to use every tool at its disposal as it is to avoid studiously doing what's been done before.
  13. This record is a tremendous achievement, but in the end, the grandeur of Hidden can be a little much to take in all at once.
  14. 70
    Hidden would be unbearably pretentious if Barnett and crew didn't execute their mission with such wild-eyed determination. Instead, it's a chilling thrill.
  15. Compared to the negation-for-negation's-sake attitude of their debut, "Beat Pyramid," Hidden sounds serious, holistic, exacting and expensive.
  16. Somber, arty and quintessentially British: that's Hidden the second album by These New Puritans.
  17. Hidden won't change British indie, but it should obliterate all expectations as far as These New Puritans are concerned.
  18. 75
    Call it whatever you want-Barnett and his bandmates are just getting started with their musical experiments.
  19. Whatever its flaws, Hidden stands as a bracingly original statement from a band entirely too new to have this many good ideas. Come December, it may not make any "best of" lists, but it's certainly one of the most fascinating albums we're likely to see this year.
  20. These New Puritans are still figuring out the right balance, but Hidden remains an impressive step forward.
  21. Mojo
    80
    The overall result is not the studious mess it could have been, but an adventurous, challenging and futuristic recording, albeit one that might cause a little aural indigestion. [Feb 2010, p. 93]
  22. Uncut
    80
    Difficult to pin down, Hidden is even harder to forget. [Feb 2010, p.104]
  23. Q Magazine
    80
    The whole album passes without anything you could call a tune, but there's a keen intelligence at work: while fiercely odd, it's frequently electrifying, too. [Feb 2010, p. 112]
  24. Here we are not even two years later and the band has taken a huge leap forward. Or, more accurately, sideways. Nothing in the angular post-punk of 08's Beat Pyramid suggested the band was capable of something this novel.
  25. Lurch into odd-ball avant-pop almost pays off for UK eccentrics.
  26. Alternative Press
    60
    Drummer George Barnett's military-precision beats are way up in the mix, but the band dynamic that made "Pyramid" so engaging, vibrant and coruscating, is virtually non-existent. [Apr 2010, p.130]
  27. These New Puritans maintain a sense of prim composure that may appeal to listeners who prefer their dread to be more precise, less anarchic.

Awards & Rankings

User Score
8.6

Universal acclaim- based on 77 Ratings

User score distribution:
  1. Positive: 67 out of 77
  2. Negative: 7 out of 77
  1. Oct 5, 2014
    10
    This is an amazing album, a masterpiece of contemporary music. Hidden has a unique style, a beautiful grandeur mixed with melancholic andThis is an amazing album, a masterpiece of contemporary music. Hidden has a unique style, a beautiful grandeur mixed with melancholic and amazing melodies. Needless to say that it's their best record. Full Review »
  2. Apr 10, 2013
    10
    A visionary piece of work. If you don't like it, that means you are a pleb. Awesome percussion throughout, and the way they incorporated brassA visionary piece of work. If you don't like it, that means you are a pleb. Awesome percussion throughout, and the way they incorporated brass and woodwind is great. The fact that it wasn't even nominated for the mercury music prize shows you how stupid and irrelevant the mercury music prize is. Full Review »
  3. VincentS.
    Mar 3, 2010
    10
    Genius. The most original, powerful album I have heard in years. A classic to rank alongside Metal Box.