- Critic score
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- By date
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Rolling StoneMastermind John Roderick packs an endearing, nuanced indie-boy voice and a bucketload of bittersweet pop-rock melodies. [13 Jul 2006, p.105]
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It's apparent that great care was taken in the making of this record as the meticulous production radiates through the music on every song.
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The first chunk of Putting the Days to Bed consists of the kind of big-chorused, proudly conventional pop songs summers are made of... Elsewhere Roderick's voice and lyrical acumen fail him.
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A dazzling collection of songs, Putting The Days To Bed cements Roderick's reputation as one of the best songwriters working today.
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SpinAddictive listening. [Aug 2006, p.80]
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These are good songs, catchy enough to claim a place in your head while grounded by enough passion to put them close to your heart. It’s just that the Long Winters have proven themselves capable of even better than that.
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Putting the Days to Bed is a solid effort-- a step in a promising new direction.
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Entertainment WeeklyRoderick's knotty tales never wrap up neatly--and they're all the better for it. [4 Aug 2006, p.69]
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Roderick has a disarming command of how swelling choruses and careful harmonies can push a song from good to great.
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Putting the Days to Bed finds Roderick writing his most intimate lyrics to date while also building upon the radiant pop sensibility of 2005's Ultimatum EP.
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A substantive collection of back-to-basics indie rock.
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MagnetBed... opts to crank the volume knobs a little, with wildly divergent results. [#73, p.100]
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UncutIt's Roderick's lyrics that really grip. [Nov 2006, p.118]
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Even though Days To Bed is littered with the sort of tunes that indie pop fans obsessively search for, it suffers the same fate as the group’s previous releases. By the time you reach the final 25% of the album, you’re more than ready to go to bed — and not in a good way.
User score distribution:
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Positive: 4 out of 5
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Mixed: 0 out of 5
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Negative: 1 out of 5
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PatDAug 5, 2006
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MatthewJul 27, 2006