- Critic score
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- By date
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While Picaresque follows its predecessor's -- the treacly Her Majesty -- predilection for seafaring and mythology, its boot-covered feet are more firmly planted in the present, resulting in the group's most accessible -- and decidedly upbeat -- product to date.
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In developing into such a formidable flock, the Decemberists not only have far outstripped those ridiculous comparisons to Neutral Milk Hotel that dogged Her Majesty, but have also allowed Meloy to widen his lyrical scope and hone his ambitious narratives.
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UncutCuts deeper and sharper than previous Decemberists efforts. [Sep 2005, p.116]
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The effect is one of musical theater.
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New Musical Express (NME)Resembles the Arcade Fire if they were from the Renaissance era and rubbish. [23 Jul 2005, p.50]
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Picaresque is a triumph of theatrical imagination: the culmination of the Decemberists' steady march to greatness in four years of enriched storytelling and folk-rock invention.
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At times The Decemberists sail close to being an horrific hybrid of They Might Be Giants and The Coral - all arched eyebrows and accordions.
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Under The RadarThe group had a lot of hype to live up to and they nearly managed to do it. [#9]
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For fans of chiming, literate, lovelorn pop, Picaresque is an absolute treasure trove.
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Picaresque is more than an indie-pop album, it's a collection of eleven lavishly arranged acts rife with the whiff of greasepaint and the roar of an adoring crowd, which you should be a part of.
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Sounds brighter and deeper than anything The Decemberists previously attempted.
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SpinThough [Meloy] rarely cracks a smile, he finds creativity in defeat. [Apr 2005, p.101]
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The Decemberists’ first two records—Castaways and Cutouts and Her Majesty (both in 2003)—felt a touch spotty.... Picaresque trumps them both by dint of its focus, consistency and restraint.
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Entertainment Weekly[Meloy's] lyrics skip across history... and overflow with mellifluous rhymes. [25 Mar 2005, p.71]
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Over rudimentary, skiffle-derived hooks, a kitchen-sink orchestra creates an aura of portent. Then in steps Meloy, doping up the whole affair with empty melancholy until it has to breathe through a tube, wailing big words in a forced accent that conveys despair but fails to signify its cause, fails to signify anything.
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Alternative PressThe more realized updates of [Her Majesty] that crowd out the backed of Picaresque reveal a wit so bizarre and vaudevillian beauty so ultimately endearing that by the end, Meloy's sprawling form of theatrical folk has us all. [Apr 2005, p.116]
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It's hard to imagine The Decemberists topping such a fantastic and ambitious record, but as their previous albums show, I'm sure they'll have no problem one-upping themselves again.
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Their best full length yet.
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MagnetThe album refines rather than revamps the Decemberists' approach; it's the brightest panel of a triptych, not a new exhibit. [#67, p.95]
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Where 2003's Her Majesty the Decemberists unfurled tales of royalty, and debut Castaways and Cutouts talked of the sea, Picaresque drafts a whole new cast of characters just as colorful.
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BlenderGleams with emotion. [Apr 2005, p.113]
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FilterThe tunes are almost more like short stage scenes than mere songs about people, but the band does well to prevent them from coming off as cheesy allegories so that even the illiterate boors out there can enjoy their downright pretty moments. [#15, p.101]
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While Picaresque is a significant step forward, it’s also a logical one. The band’s sonic palette has expanded gradually from album to album, and appears to have come full circle here.
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"Picaresque" is by far the Decemberists' best work to date.
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“I am a writer, writer of fictions,” Meloy claims on “Engine Driver,” and that’s exactly what he does, but it’s what everyone else does too, the only real difference being Meloy hits the thesaurus and maritime literature a bit harder than most.
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Another accomplished, cohesive effort that finds the group continuing to tweak without significantly changing its sound.
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UrbThis is XTC times Elvis Costello plus the finest moments from the Americana greats and then some. [Apr 2005, p.108]
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Picaresque is dense and complicated, but only rarely threatens to tip under its own weight.
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It’s amazing to see how the Decemberists have grown. The songs from their first EP, 5 Songs, seem like a man and an acoustic guitar, where Picaresque feels like a full blown orchestra.
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Picaresque features some of Meloy’s most assured songwriting... What makes Picaresque a great album, however, is the snug synthesis between the rest of the bandmates playing in relation to Meloy’s verbose lyrics.
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This is The Decemberists' strongest release to date, and proves that the group's unique thesaurus-rock has a bright future.
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While the music is as delicious and diverse as ever, the Decemberists' meal ticket is Meloy's unmatched lyrical prowess, which borders at times on mod-Shakespearean.
Awards & Rankings
User score distribution:
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Positive: 115 out of 127
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Mixed: 3 out of 127
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Negative: 9 out of 127
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Oct 9, 2017
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Feb 16, 2016
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Dec 15, 2012