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- By date
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BlenderSinger-songwriter Britt Daniel's gift for obtuse yet engaging melody is now where it ought to be: up front. [#9, p.155]
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Meticulously choppy and frequently free of inherent genre boundaries, it's an askew masterpiece of brains, brawn, heart, and soul.
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UncutSpoon's secret is that this tension is never quite released, the martial beat never breaks down, full rock music never quite kicks in. [Oct 2002, p.120]
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Something much bigger than last year's Girls Can Tell, the breakthrough album skeptics like me took for a fluke peak.
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The arrangements, referencing indie-rock more than participating in it, pile on heft to the small-life tragedies: Matt Brown's sax toughens up Spoon's welterweight ranking, while [Eggo] Johanson's piano gives it roots, rag, and bonus rhythm.
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The complexity and depth of the songs has increased; the band sounds less like they're trying to channel The Pixies, and more like they're reaching toward the sublime.
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Will be among many year-end best-of lists, and deservingly so.
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Built mainly of solitary guitar/keyboard figures and elementary rhythm parts, the songs are too direct for this to be Daniel's Kid A, but he's obviously enjoying tweaking people's expectations.
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Entertainment WeeklyCould be the Strokes in 10 years--if they work hard. [Listen 2 This Supplement, Aug 2002, p.14]
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If this isnt a breakthrough album for them that takes them to the top of the heap, seeing them showered with money, women and limos, well, then the consumer and music fan is not doing their job.
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Daniel diminishes his melodies to fit the demands of arty cadence throughout Kill The Moonlight's first half, which makes the more generously melodic second side not just welcome, but inspiring.
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Spoon's latest is their magnum opus to date; it takes a scalpel to the highlight reel of their career, cutting and pasting a 35-minute tour de force that ends too soon.
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Spoon rebounds from the insurmountable challenge of following up the colossally brilliant Girls Can Tell with an equally impeccable album.
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SpinThe result is indie-rock as passive-aggressive blues implosion. [Sep 2002, p.128]
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Even the album's sparest moments feature Spoon's much-heralded knack with catchy melodies and hooks, even if songs such as "Don't Let It Get You Down" would be even more memorable with a slightly more fleshed-out approach.
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This is simple music, driving music, perfect music for getting a good bath from the asinine perils of nu-metal and modern rock.
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Its that rare record thats equal parts innovation and familiarity, or what one might refer to as a perfectly designed and executed experiment in indie aesthetics.
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Yet another brilliant pop record for the college radio crowd.
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Moonlight, which grows more and more likeable with repeated listens, is Spoon's strongest effort yet, topping 2001's Girls Can Tell and even 1998's A Series of Sneaks.
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MagnetWhile every cut is identifiably Spoon and the album will satisfy hard-line fans of the band, a fiery R&B element is now a significant component. [#55, p.88]
Awards & Rankings
User score distribution:
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Positive: 100 out of 111
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Mixed: 4 out of 111
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Negative: 7 out of 111
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Aug 16, 2015
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Mar 20, 2011
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Feb 1, 2012