• Record Label: Sub Pop
  • Release Date: Feb 24, 2017
Metascore
76

Generally favorable reviews - based on 20 Critic Reviews

Critic score distribution:
  1. Positive: 16 out of 20
  2. Negative: 0 out of 20
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  1. Magnet
    Apr 14, 2017
    90
    It's best record. [No. 141, p.61]
  2. Feb 24, 2017
    90
    Why Love Now is the first in a potentially endless stream of politically charged punk rock records this year. However, it’s extremely hard to see any of them trumping this glorious, if uncomfortable, masterpiece.
  3. 85
    With riffs weighted so they're heavy enough to bludgeon, and vocals that feel like they're being torn straight from the larynx, the album is a tour de force of high octane refrains and filth-driven focus.
  4. Feb 27, 2017
    80
    Why Love Now, PJ’s fifth, is a surprisingly tuneful deconstruction of themes as varied as cancer (Waiting on My Horrible Warning), the modern workplace (“singer” Matt Korvette is an insurance adjuster) and male assholery that swings between scary and hilarious.
  5. Feb 24, 2017
    80
    Why Love Now truly comes to life when the band uses their punishing sound to explore the absurdity of modern masculinity.
  6. Feb 24, 2017
    80
    Why Love Now is reserved in its sonic experimentation. But for a band as sharp and capable as this one, that’s not really a problem. Beneath the acerbic jokes, Korvette is a humane and considerate writer and performer.
  7. Feb 23, 2017
    80
    His band’s eardrum-perforating din isn’t for the faint-hearted, but is a lot of fun and delivers some uncomfortable home truths.
  8. Feb 23, 2017
    80
    Why Love Now is a brash ballache of an album that will make you hate yourself as much as it makes you hate the world. Rest assured lads, the bar is now slightly higher than it was a week ago.
  9. Feb 16, 2017
    80
    Why Love Now may be their second album on Sub Pop, but there has been no cleaning up or pulling punches. Pissed Jeans are as soiled, sordid and scintillating as ever.
  10. Feb 3, 2017
    80
    Happily, this follow-up finds them operating at a similarly scintillating capacity, grinding down on the ugliness buried in the mundanity of modern life and crushing it into the wreckage of metal and post-punk.
  11. Mar 1, 2017
    79
    Their music has never gone down easier, but their commentary has never hit so uncomfortably hard.
  12. 70
    As a whole, Pissed Jeans have put out the best, harshest, yet most listenable album of their career.
  13. Feb 28, 2017
    70
    Why Love Now shows Pissed Jeans' songwriting reaching new peaks of awareness and focus, all the while remaining true to their brand of dissonant punk.
  14. Feb 23, 2017
    70
    As a whole, this is a typically unpredictable and manic album. Musically, it couldn’t be accused of being subtle, but it does show a band pushing themselves to see where they can take their sound.
  15. Feb 23, 2017
    70
    It's easily the meatiest the band has sounded to date, but it doesn't deviate from the punishing, aural miasma that Pissed Jeans have been stewing in since their 2006 debut.
  16. Feb 3, 2017
    70
    The best sounding record in Pissed Jeans' catalog. [Jan - Mar 2017, p.66]
  17. 60
    This is modern life sliced up with the precision of a medical scalpel and then force-fed through a high-density filter of piss and vinegar.
  18. Kerrang!
    Feb 22, 2017
    60
    Full of weirdness and with groove to spare, this is a fascinating collection. [25 Feb 2017, p.53]
  19. Mojo
    Feb 3, 2017
    60
    Pissed Jeans might deal in uncompromising, near-unlistenable noise, but in a world gone increasingly crazy, their scourging hi-jinks make more and more sense. [Mar 2017, p.94]
  20. Feb 3, 2017
    60
    While it’s probably a good thing that the rest of record isn’t quite as intense as that [Waiting On My Horrible Warning], the 11 songs that follow remain a deliberately overbearing barrage of droning, snarling and unrelenting noise punk.

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