• Record Label: Warp
  • Release Date: Sep 21, 2010
Metascore
74

Generally favorable reviews - based on 13 Critic Reviews

Critic score distribution:
  1. Positive: 11 out of 13
  2. Negative: 0 out of 13
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  1. The duo can still cast a mood, and that's what makes this debut all the more frustrating -- all the parts are here, but they don't come together as often as they could and should.
  2. If this were an EP, it would be captivating--Everdell's voice is certainly commanding--but, spread out over 11 songs, it loses some of its hold.
  3. The Hundred In Hands manage to create mesmeric tracks of monolithic noise and danceable beat.
  4. That word, confidence, is one that can be applied to much of the record. For many other bands, it can be hard to pull off accessibility with credibility. Of course, that credibility could falsely come from their community more than anything, but this case is not that simple. There are real take you aback moments on this album that are based on plain pop sensibility above anything else.
  5. This can't help but feel like a very good EP nestled within a merely good LP. But, if The Hundred In The Hands are to produce an unqualified success next time round, they needn't do anything drastically different.
  6. Arriving ahead of a full-length, this five-song EP confirms our suspicion of the duo's pop genius.
  7. This record is the SoHo-boutique equivalent of a Thanksgiving dinner: it tastes all right, but good luck staying awake 'til dessert.
  8. The Hundred in the Hands sounds like the debut record of a band with plenty of ideas for a follow-up. It's nice that they didn't make a straightforward dance record-or, for that matter, a straightforward rock record, or a straightforward electropop record.
  9. Q Magazine
    80
    Friedmans and Everdell have struck gold. [Oct 2010, p.108]
  10. 70
    The detached aesthetic can turn anesthetic when the tunes occasionally falter or the overdubbed grooves fail to generate frisson, but the sweetly twitchy one-two punch of "Dressed in Dresden" and "Last City" brings this studiously chic debut to a sweaty climax.
  11. It's all a very pretty sequined package, but moving forward, the Hundred in the Hands might find their music as cornered as Captain Fetterman's troops were off the Bozeman Trail.
  12. Uncut
    80
    It's halfway between Kim Wilde and truly wild, and, as such, hugely entertaining. [Oct 2010, p.97]
  13. 90
    Their precise work is only weakened by 2 anemic post-punk tracks, but 9 out of 11 ain't bad. You should expect to hear a lot more from the duo in the instant future.

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