Buy Now
- Critic score
- Publication
- By date
-
Jan 28, 2013This may be a flashback to the sound of a decade prior, but after getting so far away from their metal roots, most fans will agree that this balance of creepy ambience and pummeling riffs is a welcome return to form.
-
Feb 4, 2013Good as these guys are at mashing up genres on the fly, there's no denying the straighter, fist-pumpier stuff here works best.
-
Feb 4, 2013The only thing that keeps Oddfellows from being a thoroughly stellar album are the seemingly requisite filler tracks that simply do not last in your memory no matter how many times you listen to them.
-
UncutJan 25, 2013Less outre than much of Patton's work. [Feb 2013, p.80]
-
Feb 1, 2013Oddfellows then is a fairly straightforward album, although it possesses enough personality and deftness of touch to bear repeated listens.
-
Jan 25, 2013It strikes the prefect balance: accessible, yet with enough idiosyncrasy to make it more than just a formulaic retread of past glories.
-
Jan 29, 2013That's Oddfellow's overriding vibe, as well as its greatest asset: tighter songs and sturdier structures, with more room left for atmosphere, exploration, and subversion within them.
-
Jan 28, 2013On the surface, it's big, dumb, and fun; just beneath, there's an improbably complicated band at work, showing its hand only on repeated listens.
-
Alternative PressJan 25, 2013Oddfellows is a multifaceted and consistently fascinating album. [Feb 2013, p.94]
-
Feb 14, 2013Led by Patton’s smarmy vocals and the band’s intricately heavy instrumentation, Oddfellows cuts a swath between infectious bangers (Stone Letter, South Paw) and quirky atmospherics.
-
Feb 1, 2013Tomahawk has since its debut defined itself and Patton provides enough of an anchor to carry the band through lamentation (I.O.U.) and noir-ish narrative (A Thousand Eyes) in addition to its heavier output, which make up the album's best moments.
-
MagnetFeb 11, 2013Bassist Dunn and drummer Stanier lay down weird sprightly grooves, while guitarist Denison arranges their melodies into something hard and densely poppy with arch-but-upbeat harmonics pulled from Pet Sounds. [No. 95, p.61]
-
Classic Rock MagazineJun 6, 2013While wonderfully idiosyncratic, Oddfellows finds them at their most accessible to date. [Apr 2013, p.95]
-
Kerrang!Feb 26, 2013Anyone who remembers Mike covering Italian pop songs from yesteryear ion his 2010 album Mondo Cane will know, strictly speaking, a few of his recent projects have sounded more interesting than they have incredible. Thankfully, Oddfellows is both. [2 Feb 2013, p.54]
-
Jan 25, 2013It's a surprising, thoroughly consistent return-to-form, and it makes Oddfellows the first contender for hard-rock album of the year.