The Drift - Scott Walker
Metascore
85 out of 100

Universal acclaim - based on 30 Critics

Critic score distribution:
  1. Positive: 27 out of 30
  2. Negative: 0 out of 30
  1. Walker has gone as far into the atmosphere as one can travel while still being earthbound. [Jul 2006, p.210]
  2. The Drift is a record that demands a lot of work and repays tenfold.
  3. This is out in the margins, removed from 'pop' and 'alternative' genres by the scale of its reach, its bloody and bold ambition. It is complex, multilayered, densely plotted, wordy. It's also scary, harsh and bruised.
  4. Despite its complexity, every twist and turn of The Drift is absolutely compelling.
  5. It's unlikely that any other album will sound much like The Drift this year, and even less likely that it could be forgotten if heard even once.
  6. Even at its most dissonant and abstract, this record is human to the core, and if you're ready to face a few demons, it's as inspiring as music gets.
  7. 'The Drift' is an extraordinary piece of work, even more challenging and expansive than Scott Walker's startling last album.
  8. The Drift isn't an equally severe leap from Tilt [as Tilt was from Climate of Hunter], but it is darker, less arranged, alternately more and less dense, and ultimately more frightening.
  9. No easy listening feat by any stretch of the imagination, Scott Walker's The Drift will provide critics and general music fans with talking points for the next 10 years. It is, simply, a work of staggering emotional sentiment and complexity that few will be able to match.
  10. Most of these songs will startle you at some point. [#268, p.50]
  11. The Drift--in all its nightmarish, bloody glory--is as bold and profound a comment on our times as has emerged so far this century.
  12. The lengths of hiss and silence can be unnerving, especially when his ethereal prose floats into a void. Yet when the swells come and Walker breaks the waves, it's a thing of absolute beauty, and the black turns neon.
  13. Every bit as stark, foreboding, but utterly singular as 'Tilt'. [6 May 2006, p.33]
  14. Quite simply, "The Drift" is unlike any other record on Earth.
  15. 80
    A record that makes the tortured beauty of Tilt appear like a mildly resigned shrug. [Jun 2006, p.102]
  16. 80
    This is a record that genuinely sounds like nothing you have heard before. If you can rise to its portentous challenge... The Drift will prove to be a frightening, bewitching and rewarding experience. [Jun 2006, p.96]
  17. 80
    The Drift is like a nightmare you look forward to repeating. [Jun 2006, p.148]
  18. 80
    More avant-opera than pop. [Jul 2006, p.90]
  19. This is a beautiful nightmare with no referent in pop and few in recorded-music history. [Jun/Jul 2006, p.131]
  20. The most elaborately impenetrable album we're likely to hear this decade.
  21. The album is powerful stuff, and though it's unlikely to be heard by many, it's even more unlikely to be forgotten by those who do hear it.
  22. [An] uneasy listening masterwork.
  23. Ultimately, those enamored with Walker's infrequent but peculiarly expressive post-'70s work (from Climate of Hunter on) will find much to enjoy here.
  24. Those who lovingly caress their copies of Tilt have probably already jumped in its trenches, liking what there is to like, and there is much to like about this album, even if it doesn't maintain the consistency of that masterpiece; those who find his voice annoying have already set up sniper posts across the field; everybody else is standing in the middle wondering what the fuss is about. The Drift won't change that.
  25. It's a lot to digest. [#14]
  26. "The Drift" sets out only to follow its own obsessions; it's both lush and austere, utterly personal and often Delphic in its impenetrability.
  27. His effort to make the most tense, uncomfortable record in the world has resulted in something that actually feels pretty straightforward, uncomplicated, and digestible.
  28. This new album is relentlessly dark, disjointed, and disturbing. While there exist elements of his pop past -- gorgeous string sections, delicate guitars, bombastic drums -- there's nothing like a song here.
  29. By so clearly rejecting the terms and expectations of rock and pop, The Drift asks fairly explicitly to be taken as a serious work of art. However, for all its highbrow aspirations, it seems to fall between two realms, lacking the innovative reach that would make it a credible presence among contemporary avant-garde compositions.
  30. It could be high art. It could be utter bollocks. Either way, it's lovely when it's over. [Jun 2006, p.119]
User Score

Generally favorable reviews- based on 106 Ratings

User score distribution:
  1. Positive: 30 out of 49
  2. Negative: 17 out of 49
  1. emilyc.
    0
    How about if I just moan while shoving a crooked stick in my **** and record it. It would be far more interesting than this **** and would probably sound about the same. Full Review »
  2. ErikH
    8
    This is an extremely difficult album that a lot of people will hate. You can tell just by reading the user reviews which of these people actually know what to expect from a Walker album and those who just listened based on a Metacritic score or Pitchfork review. It took me about two months (and dozens of listens) to penetrate this album. When I finally did, I found it terrifying, deep, and breath-taking. There's as much to be found in its moments of tape-hiss and silence as there is when it reaches it's most decadent moments. Worth listening, but only if you're willing to invest time in it. Full Review »
  3. jamesm.
    10
    Thus far the record of the new century, from an artist who made some of last century's best records, i.e. Scott 3. Psst... These aren�39;t waltzes for dodo's. psst. This noirish take on life in a post modern world is accurate and revelatory. psst. And not, I might add with touches of absurdist humor..psst. There has always been an eerie strain running through Scott's recordings, now with this stripped down, bleak, spare approach the essence of life, if not music itself, is laid bare for all to see, and for all to hear.psst... Full Review »