Metascore
81

Universal acclaim - based on 8 Critic Reviews

Critic score distribution:
  1. Positive: 7 out of 8
  2. Mixed: 0 out of 8
  3. Negative: 1 out of 8
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  1. Nov 3, 2017
    90
    Elegant from the first minute to its 70th, Ojalá is an essential album for fans of Raymonde-affiliated projects like Snowbird and This Mortal Coil, and is among his and the year-in-indie's most exquisite works.
  2. Magnet
    Dec 22, 2017
    85
    The results are nothing short of stunning. [No. 149, p.59]
  3. Q Magazine
    Nov 22, 2017
    80
    This is far more than just a vanity project by a label boss. [Jan 2018, p.113]
  4. Nov 13, 2017
    80
    A beautiful, haunted, haunting album; hear it.
  5. Mojo
    Nov 3, 2017
    80
    It hold together, though--a quiet coalition, but one that is wholly satisfying. [Dec 2017, p.89]
  6. Nov 3, 2017
    80
    This is a diverse collection of quality melancholia by two intuitive veterans with nothing to prove except their ability to create music to invest your soul into.
  7. Uncut
    Nov 3, 2017
    70
    Raymonde elicits gorgeous performances from guest vocalists. ... Even more welcome are the deviations from the sumptuous dream-pop and ethereal acid-folk modes you'd expect of Ojala. [Dec 2017, p.28]
  8. Nov 3, 2017
    30
    Some bright instrumental flourishes are occasionally added in an attempt to give the songs some pulp but it's nothing to get too excited about since they're neither grabbing nor contagious and act more like threadbare window dressings to the mundane song structures and their gentle acoustics. For better or worse, a collection of guest vocalists, both male and female, are used throughout, including an appearance by former Midlake vocalist Tim Smith. But this only serves to highlight the album's inconsistencies.

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