Metascore
75

Generally favorable reviews - based on 20 Critic Reviews

Critic score distribution:
  1. Positive: 14 out of 20
  2. Negative: 0 out of 20
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  1. Apr 14, 2017
    80
    This album deserves your attention and is a perfect example of a group accomplishing and exceeding their full potential.
  2. Apr 14, 2017
    75
    It swings between biting and sublime, with occasional moments of triteness; but when Meath and Sanborn get it right, they get it very, very right. In a live setting, even the trite ones will bang, and maybe that’s all you can really ask.
  3. Apr 26, 2017
    80
    What Now is accessible in every sense of the word, but after several spins, it'll pull you much deeper than one might initially think.
  4. Apr 26, 2017
    74
    It grapples with and effectively communicates what happens after the party, what it feels like to come down.
  5. Apr 26, 2017
    72
    When Meath and Sanborn ease into a slower lane, they find a sweetness that isn’t entirely likable. There is a bitterness to their Southern bless-your-heart feel, swaddling sharp observations in mannered dance-pop.
  6. Apr 14, 2017
    80
    With What Now, the band celebrates infectious, accessible music as a diversion from the mundane, as a way to give voice to universal feelings, even as they warn against its ability to distract from genuine expression in favor of manufactured sentiment.
  7. May 1, 2017
    80
    The rhythm sections and synths have been crafted with a newfound appreciation for sound, but with unexpected, childlike curiosity. The lyrics retain a relatable amount of simplicity, yet they also portray an intimate exploration of self-worth and image.
  8. Aug 7, 2017
    70
    Resonate with them, and you learn to speak about yourself in a way that carries meaning--and this is what What Now does best. Take a walk with this in your headphones and look at the people passing by; you’re allowed some isolation among others.
  9. May 3, 2017
    80
    What Now contemplates private change of circumstance and personhood with pathos, kindness, and humour, and bangs fervidly in the process.
  10. Apr 28, 2017
    100
    A record so good it answers its own title question and makes you eager to ask it again.
  11. 80
    At its core, What Now is a love letter to music, warts and all. About the romance, the emotional release and the sheer joy it can bring when everything feels so doom-laden.
  12. 80
    There are plenty of less banging, but still lovely, treats elsewhere on this sweet-but-sharp set, too.
  13. Uncut
    Apr 20, 2017
    80
    This follow-up to their 2014 debut blends antique-sounding folk tracks with glossier electronic numbers including "Die Young," which cocoons premature death in pretty harmonies, and "Kick Jump Twist," about the quest for instant fame. [Jun 2017, p.38]
  14. Apr 18, 2017
    75
    Sylvan Esso fans will fall deeper in love with the duo on this second album, while its casual onlookers won't be able to unlock their gaze. [Apr-Jun 2017, p.86]
User Score
7.5

Generally favorable reviews- based on 18 Ratings

User score distribution:
  1. Positive: 14 out of 18
  2. Negative: 1 out of 18
  1. May 16, 2017
    7
    While I didn’t find their sound to be particularly entrancing here, which seemed to be the crux of the album, some of the spaces that theyWhile I didn’t find their sound to be particularly entrancing here, which seemed to be the crux of the album, some of the spaces that they created were quite cool and ethereal, with real worth here being the well-formed melodic shapes that made this music memorable. My Score: 124/180 (Good) = 6.9/10 Full Review »