- Critic score
- Publication
- By date
-
Entertainment WeeklyUnabashedly hook-filled, the album will leave you aching to see this group live. [25 Jan 2008, p.70]
-
Taking pages out of some very strong playbooks (think Superchunk, Guided by Voices, early Wilco), the Whigs find a way to revive honest-to-goodness pop rock for a new generation.
-
The album sounds like something complete, that survived the changes that were necessary to make it.
-
The Whigs are from Athens, Ga., and like Kings of Leon and My Morning Jacket, they give what they’ve learned from indie-rock a distinctly Southern stamp: a drawl in the vocals, twang and resonance in the guitars, a sense of continuity with the past..
-
A noisy fun house bouncing around Nirvana, the Replacements, and Guided by Voices, the Whigs' sophomore slam is just as likely to push you up against a wall as whisper pillow talk.
-
The 11 songs here clock in at a tidy 37 minutes--plenty of time to flavor the straight-ahead rock jolts with spaced-out country-rock ballads and pop-flavored rave-up replete with a horn section.
-
Mission Control is a collection of catchy, raucous tunes. There’s little innovation here, but that’s not what these guys are about.
-
Alternative PressThe problem with this kind of timeless rock 'n' roll is that every city in the U.S. has a band who have mnore or less mastered it. [Feb 2008, p.119]
-
It swaggers like prime Replacements, though with far better polish. [Jan 2008, p.103]
-
MagnetThe Whigs occassionally hit on moments of poignancy, but most of their time is spent reinventing the classic-rock wheel in a rather self-aware fashion. [Winter 2008, p.114]
-
American slacker act back on track.
-
With drums drained of nuance and guitars always overpowering, the basic song structures sound formulaic. The few songs with radical differences stand out as models of power-pop craft:
User score distribution:
-
Positive: 9 out of 10
-
Mixed: 0 out of 10
-
Negative: 1 out of 10
-
KKJan 30, 2008
-
J.H.Jan 29, 2008
-
DanielC.Jan 28, 2008