User Score
Universal acclaim- based on 27 Ratings
User score distribution:
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Positive: 21 out of 27
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Mixed: 5 out of 27
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Negative: 1 out of 27
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- Most helpful
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LeoTJun 17, 2010WOW! These guys never disappoint. highly recommended.
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AndyBJun 16, 2010Possibly the most honest blues album i've heard in a very long time. The honesty that presents itself in every track is incredible.
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SteveCJun 16, 2010
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NateKJun 16, 2010
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AndySJun 16, 2010Brilliant. He never fails to make a great record. I was hooked on the first full listen.
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AnthonyJJun 15, 2010this album is lined with perfect melodies that flow together very nicely. the atmosphere of this album is awe inspiring.
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JacksonJJun 15, 2010Very solid musicianship. Sounds like the band is having fun and is a more representative of their live shows. To bad the Chicago Tribune rating is incorrect. It is showing a "30" and if you click on the review Greg Kot actually gave it 3 out of 4 stars. Should be a "75". Hopefully this will be corrected.
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RobinSJun 15, 2010Really the best Tom Petty album in years, gotta love this!
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Awards & Rankings
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Tuneful and gently flowing, Mojo is endowed with the qualities diehards expect from Tom ''Watch Me Rock Out Without Breaking a Sweat'' Petty. What it lacks is instant classics (didn't he used to be good for a few per album?).
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Petty’s classic pop knack, breezy melodies and laid-back drawl take a back seat to Campbell’s meandering, jammy solos and the album’s overwhelmingly old-guy-blues sound.
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The record is long on instrumentals and short on singing, with Petty showing up mostly to fill space between guitar solos and extended jams, giving Mojo a higher Heartbreakers-to-Petty ratio than any previous release. But if Mojo is meant to be the band's showcase, it's not an especially successful one.