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Waltzed in from the Rumbling Image
Metascore
69

Generally favorable reviews - based on 10 Critic Reviews What's this?

User Score
7.6

Generally favorable reviews- based on 5 Ratings

  • Summary: The fourth full-length release for the Canadian indie rock trio band features guest appearances from Emma Baxter, Caroline Desilets, Katie Moore, and Adéle Trottier-Rivard.
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Score distribution:
  1. Positive: 7 out of 10
  2. Negative: 0 out of 10
  1. May 5, 2016
    80
    Every few months, the members would meet up at their studio and play whatever they felt like without the looming pressure of album cycles or release dates. Eventually, these sessions became the basis for Waltzed In From The Rumbling, a record at once thoughtful and unwieldy.
  2. Apr 27, 2016
    80
    Much of Waltzed in From the Rumbling's success lies in Plants and Animals' ability to look both inside and outside of their musical sphere, incorporating strings, choir vocals and found sounds while possessing the insight and musical acuity to make it all feel organic.
  3. Jun 15, 2016
    75
    Waltzed In From the Rumbling is a showcase of uniquely thoughtful musicianship, shaped as much by the performance and structure as it is by the quality and pristine definition. It's the kind of warm, mellow evening record you might not know you needed, but it sooths and surprises enough to earn repeated listenings.
  4. Apr 26, 2016
    68
    Plants and Animals have created something beautiful, even if it's not wholly original.
  5. Apr 26, 2016
    67
    Waltzed in from the Rumbling is a strong effort from a band that’s been around a while, making this kind of lovely indie ­rock since it was topping the CMJ charts in the mid ­2000s. As other, bigger names wandered in the direction of disco (The Arcade Fire) or electronica (Sufjan), Plants & Animals have continued to hone their sound, and this new album is a testament to that work.
  6. Mojo
    Apr 26, 2016
    60
    Though the record perhaps lacks the one killer tune or irresistibly "come hither" song title that can really get you at it, the swooning Pure Heart, intermittently cinematic We Were One, neat instrumental segue Fata Morgana and sonically startling So Many Nights help flag a unique and fruitful cocktail of influences. [Jun 2016, p.90]
  7. May 11, 2016
    60
    It may be an intentional shift, but the soulful resonance of 2012's The End of That has given way to an artful experimentalism that, while musically impressive, doesn't make as big an impact. Still, it's an ambitious near miss from a very good band that has proven it can be both cerebral and heartfelt.

See all 10 Critic Reviews

Score distribution:
  1. Positive: 0 out of
  2. Mixed: 0 out of
  3. Negative: 0 out of