Metacritic Music

Neon Bible
by The Arcade Fire

Merge
Indie, Rock
1 disc
Released 06 March 2007

One of the most anticipated releases of 2007 is this second album from Montreal's Arcade Fire, the Win Butler- and Regine Chassagne-led band that won over bloggers, critics, and, ultimately, fans with their 2004 debut 'Funeral.'

Overall Metascore

This is a weighted, normalized average of all individual scores given by critics, on a scale of 0 (worst) to 100 (best).

87 / 100

Critic Reviews

100 Observer Music Monthly
The Canadian septet are the greatest art rock group since Talking Heads stopped making sense.
100 Stylus Magazine
While they’ve enlarged their presence on record, they’ve also peopled their songs with themes and accusations more resonant than Funeral’s mournfulness.
100 The Onion (A.V. Club)
Through Neon Bible, the band is seemingly sending a beacon to other reasonable people forced underground by the world's insanity. It's almost like a musical version of Ayn Rand's Atlas Shrugged.
100 No Ripcord
The music is beautiful, spiritual, intense, fun and, as Lester Bangs once called the Clash, righteous.
100 Trouser Press
A rewarding, resonant album, Neon Bible ranks among the best indie rock recordings of all time.
100 Q Magazine
A magical kingdom of noise that's equal parts Disney's Fantasia and Echo & The Bunnymen's lavish Ocean Rain. [Apr 2007, p.107]
100 MSN Consumer Guide (Robert Christgau)
They thud rather than thunder. But what a loud and joyous thud it is.
95 Hot Press
So, Funeral was by no means a fluke. The Arcade Fire are unquestionably the real deal. And to prove it they’ve now thrown in another contender for ‘best record of the decade’.
92 Lost At Sea
Neon Bible may be a bold departure from the beloved Funeral, but the divergence is as inspired as the music itself.
91 Filter
Truly, there isn't anything here that comes close to achieving the anthemic, stomp-along, bombast of Funeral's best works. But this is a different album, and a different Arcade Fire playing to their biggest strength: emoting. [#24, p.88]
91 Entertainment Weekly
In the bleakest songs, the polyphonic swirl of strings, horns, and voices... points toward transcendence.
90 Spin
Neither a timid repeat nor a knee-jerk departure, the bigger, bolder Neon Bible better captures what Arcade Fire achieve live. [Mar 2007, p.85]
90 Blender
You can only discover fire once, though, so instead of a revolutionary blueprint, Neon Bible makes a triumphant clamor that's nearly as cathartic. [Apr 2007, p.109]
90 Delusions of Adequacy
It's an excellent album. It might be the best album released this year. And it proves that Funeral was not a fluke.
90 Dusted Magazine
Neon Bible is so successful because it showcases big ambition without ignoring the small things.
90 musicOMH.com
You could make a fair case for it not even being as good as Funeral – but my oh my, it's close.
90 New Musical Express
A record with the bleak-yet-redemptive spirit of REM's 'Automatic For The People' and the musical magnificence of a 'Deserter's Songs'. But also a record that - as much as 'London Calling' or 'What's Going On' - holds a deep, dark, truthful Black Mirror up to our turbulent times.
90 Boston Globe
Not quite of this world and not quite over the edge, these earthy, epic songs aren't meant to save us, only to supply some monumental crescendos and a wide-screen view on the way down.
90 The New York Times
Arcade Fire mines classic U2 and Bruce Springsteen far better than the Killers recently did. And Arcade Fire didn’t lose its own voice in an attempt to sound bigger and grander. [5 Mar 2007]
90 The Guardian
It's hard to think of another album that rocks in such an epic manner without sounding completely ridiculous.
90 Under The Radar
Although Funeral is the better album, Neon Bible comes close enough without being a rehash. [#17, p.90]
85 Almost Cool
For the most part, it's the sophomore release without the stumble.
85 Prefix Magazine
Some Funeral devotees may be disappointed by the more straightforward approach on Neon Bible, but their numbers will likely be easily replaced.
84 Pitchfork
Although they've expanded their sound, the Arcade Fire's transition into extroversion isn't always smooth or graceful. Neon Bible is full of clunky lyrics, revealing Butler's tendency to overstate and sensationalize.
80 ShakingThrough.net
In the end, underneath the strings and the percussion and the guitars, that is what The Arcade Fire has been about: making us want to do. That the band again achieves that goal, after changing its scope and refocusing tis sound, makes Neon Bible a success.
80 All Music Guide
It's as decadent as it is tasty -- theatricality has never been a practice that the collective has shied away from -- but there's no denying the Arcade Fire's singular vision, even when it blurs a little.
80 BBC collective
There are missteps... and the production is sometimes frustratingly muddy, but Neon Bible very nearly delivers on impossible expectations.
80 Billboard
Bombast occasionally gets the better of the songwriting, but that's a small complaint on an album that gets nearly everything just right. [10 Mar 2007]
80 Sputnikmusic
It's about as good as Funeral and features some truly wonderful songs; although The Arcade Fire have certainly progressed, Neon Bible features everything that made them special in the first place, to even more epic proportions.
80 Alternative Press
While devotees of Funeral... will surely enjoy Neon Bible, the album does have a decidedly different feel than its predecessor--mainly, there seems to be less of an emphasis on choruses. [Apr 2007, p.182]
80 Paste Magazine
It's a hard, emotional record--certainly a good one.... But, in truth, after the lavish escapism of Funeral, Neon Bible does feel like a less stratospheric accomplishment. [Mar 2007, p.60]
80 Hartford Courant
These 11 songs comprise an ambitious song cycle, and the songwriting on "Neon Bible" is stronger and more focused than it was on "Funeral."
80 Drowned In Sound
Perhaps the true beauty of Neon Bible is its imperfection.
80 Dot Music
If "Neon Bible" doesn't quite dazzle as "Funeral" did, that's more a measure of the latter album's benchmark brilliance, rather than the inferiority of the former.
80 Mojo
Here lies much of the album's magic: whatever ornate turns the music takes, at its heart is the primal stuff of great rock'n'roll. But God, is it big. [Apr 2007, p.94]
78 Austin Chronicle
Arcade Fire's Neon Bible stares down the sophomore jinx with a pissed-off preacher's penetrating gaze.
75 cokemachineglow
A considerably more gothic affair than Funeral, a set that sometimes screams “overcompensation!”
70 PopMatters
Despite a somewhat stifled mix, and the fact that Butler’s romanticism has been replaced by moments of bitterness, and in some instances petulance, what makes the new CD a worthy successor is what made us fall for this band in the first place: the music’s unflagging passion.
70 Rolling Stone
Like almost everything on Neon Bible... "No Cars Go" is excess with a point: We are drowning in the unspeakable and running out of air and fight. If only everything else on Neon Bible made that point with the same dynamic overkill.
70 Slant Magazine
The music of Neon Bible is rarely anything less than uplifting. What the songs fail to do, though, is provide any real payoff to all of that uplift and passion.
70 Tiny Mix Tapes
The songs are allowed to crack a few knuckles and stretch their legs before they do any heavy lifting, and you’ll find yourself appreciating their roots more as a result.
70 Village Voice
There are growing pains here, there's doubt and sadness and confusion. And there's fear.
70 Magnet
As is the risk with such serious-minded albums, a few songs err on the side of heavy-handedness... but Arcade Fire's raw passion and heartfelt ambition remain intact. [#75, p.90]
60 Uncut
While there is much here to admire, at its overblown worst Neon Bible is one of those records that takes itself too seriously to be taken seriously. [Apr 2007, p.90]
60 NOW Magazine
The biggest glitch is the production - the myriad elements sound cramped for space.... Too bad, cuz Butler's lyrics, which replace coming-of-age angst with poetic explorations of global anxiety, politics and an excoriation of celebrity culture, put Funeral to shame.
50 Playlouder
This veers between quite good and bloody rubbish with only a couple of flashes of brilliance here or there.

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