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Feb 8, 2013The songwriting is the driving force behind the album, and any reservations about whether or not Frightened Rabbit would transform into radio-friendly M.O.R. are swept away.
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Feb 7, 2013The precise ecstasy of the production buoys the record through its few sluggish patches.
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Feb 7, 2013When that intimact/insularity lines gets confused for the characters here, the album is fascinating. It’s when the two blur for the players that things get a bit more problematic.
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UncutJan 28, 2013Howling from the eye of the storm, Scott Hutchinson's raw holler and bleakly poetic worldview remain the key points of emotional connection. [Feb 2013, p.73]
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MojoFeb 6, 2013Though succinct segues Housing (In) and Housing (Out) have something of the filler about them, State Hospital and December's Traditions are bleakly beautiful portraits of Broken Britain, Hutchinson's fervent vocal letting it all hang out. [Mar 2013, p.86]
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Q MagazineFeb 8, 2013[The band] hasn't compromised the pitiless bleakness of Scott Hutchison's lyrical vision from their previous output. [Mar 2013, p.99]
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Feb 4, 2013Take note, Mr Paltrow: this is how you do life-affirming.
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Feb 4, 2013This lack of ego lends a refreshing air to an album which is self-assured, charismatic and quite simply brilliant.
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Under The RadarJan 28, 2013It's a truly dynamic set of recordings. [Jan-Feb 2013, p.87]
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Jan 31, 2013The result is a collection of stirring, instant anthems to get fists pumping the air and swaying crowds singing along.
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Jan 29, 2013There are still places to go, but this is an early contender for album of the year.
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Feb 5, 2013Hutchison falls in with another proud Scottish tradition: the ability to make the gloomy anthemic.
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Feb 6, 2013Frightened Rabbit's best material rivals brothers-in-brood the National and Arcade Fire, and even their B-level stuff is better than that of most acts working in this vein. But unlike those leading lights, these guys don't have the pop instincts to throw in the occasional punk scrappers, chamber-folk interludes, or disco rave-up to keep things from getting monotonous.
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Feb 11, 2013Pedestrian Verse sees Frightened Rabbit make a triumphant return to the magnificent songwriting present on their lauded second album, The Midnight Organ Fight.
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Feb 5, 2013While Pedestrian Verse feels like the most comprehensive Frightened Rabbit LP in the band’s nearly 10-year career, it also forgoes some of the band’s restless charm in the process.
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Feb 4, 2013Here, finally, is a Frightened Rabbit for all seasons: warm, buzzy tracks intersect with quieter, calmer numbers, and a few touches of the old acidic sadness, all tied together into a multi-dimensional package.
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Feb 4, 2013The production may be a little smoother but Pedestrian Verse just seems to prove how lasting, how devastating Frightened Rabbit can be.
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Feb 6, 2013From Hutchison's newfound enthusiasm for life to the band's stadium sound, Frightened Rabbit has finally created a reasonable glimmer of hope--sans blind optimism, of course.
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Feb 4, 2013Now, we see a new-found confidence as they step out their comfort zone for a deeply personal album.
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Alternative PressJan 28, 2013Ambitious but understated, intelligent but immediate, Pedestrian Verse is simultaneously heartbreaking and life affirming--and anything but pedestrian. [Mar 2013, p.90]
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MagnetFeb 11, 2013These guys do so many things well--now if they could only find their weird again. [No. 95, p.52]
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Feb 5, 2013It strikes a perfect balance between the emotional rack-drawing that's made them beloved to many an indie misanthrope and the warmth and hope that makes them better than mere scab-pickers, just as it offsets their talent for unashamed anthems with dark and gnarly little details. It's a beautifully layered construction.
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Jan 28, 2013Throughout, the lyrical clarity and emotional honesty of the band shine through, creating an album that is as much uplifting as it is in parts bleak.
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Feb 1, 2013An album with a self-deprecating title that belies the ambitions and talent displayed within it by this band on the verge of bigger things.
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Mar 1, 2013Pedestrian Verse is an album made up of melodies, lyrics and verses that are completely, well, pedestrian.
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Kerrang!Feb 26, 2013This is an album full of stirring, stadium-sized melodies. [2 Feb 2013, p.53]
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Jul 15, 2013It’s intense and contradictory, a bundle of bravado and doubt and vulnerability and longing that stays with you for a long time after the last chorus fades.
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Feb 12, 2013The Scottish outfit have delivered again with jangly pop full of skittering guitars, self-flagellating lyricism, and whimsy under a pall of darkness that no amount of the big spotlight can dispel.
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Feb 4, 2013From the self-mockingly banal title onwards, it confirms them as that rare thing: a band able to combine grandiosity and groundedness.
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Feb 15, 2013So with their fourth LP, where they burst from the tracks with peppy numbers like ‘Holy’ and Biffy-esque choruses on ‘The Woodpile’, it’s a mite disappointing.
User score distribution:
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Positive: 31 out of 37
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Mixed: 3 out of 37
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Negative: 3 out of 37
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Mar 30, 2013