Buy Now
- Critic score
- Publication
- By date
-
Jun 22, 2015This may be Prinz and Horn's most minimalist music yet, but it's also some of their most rewarding.
-
Q MagazineJun 8, 2015Relatively speaking Home Economics finds a much warmer and more colourful band at work. [Jul 2015, p.112]
-
UncutJun 8, 2015If their third album is perhaps not quite as austere as previous offerings like 2012's Clay Class, it;s still like sticking a quarter-inch jack into a George Foreman grill. [Jul 2015, p.81]
-
Jun 8, 2015The streets of home are always going to stir emotions but rarely does that cocktail of of loneliness and belonging get articulated with the gut-felt precision that Prinzhorn Dance School manage on their third record.
-
Jun 12, 2015At its best Home Economics tries to find some kind of ascension from this harshness of life. At other moments what is being said, what is got at is lost, and easily passed by unnoticed.
-
Jun 8, 2015At six tracks it’s a slight but solid return.
-
Jun 8, 2015Rather than feeling stark and severe, there’s an elegant grace in the simplicity. It makes a listener lean in to find an unexpectedly warm embrace.
-
MojoJun 10, 2015This mini-LP ladles grooves on PDS's stripped post-punk. [Jul 2015, p.96]
-
Jul 30, 2015Such restraint should give way to immediate rewards, but gems like the colorful "Reign" and cleverly disheveled "Haggle" are all too often negated by the tedium of tracks like "Clean."