For 5,509 reviews, this publication has graded:
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49% higher than the average critic
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3% same as the average critic
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48% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 3.2 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Music review score: 70
Highest review score: | You Won't Go Before You're Supposed To | |
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Lowest review score: | Unpredictable |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 2,968 out of 5509
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Mixed: 2,464 out of 5509
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Negative: 77 out of 5509
5509
music
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Critic Score
Shivering with tension, Trouble the Water is an exciting and urgent call to come together and kick off – at once a reflection of, and a cathartic release from, volatile times.- The Guardian
- Posted Nov 4, 2022
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- The Guardian
- Posted Nov 4, 2022
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- Critic Score
It’s an intense listen, demanding in the sense that you struggle to imagine putting it on in the background. Better to stick your headphones on and give Ultra Truth your undivided attention, something it amply rewards.- The Guardian
- Posted Nov 3, 2022
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- Critic Score
And I Have Been is a more straightforwardly elegant listen than I Tell a Fly. Melodies abound, orchestral elements trade off with electronics, and Clementine’s still-startling voice, an elastic tenor capable of shock and awe as well as succour, is front and centre.- The Guardian
- Posted Oct 31, 2022
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Living Sky is a fine tribute by the indefatigable Allen to his mentor’s methods, and a remarkable late-life affirmation of his own.- The Guardian
- Posted Oct 28, 2022
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- Critic Score
Revolver’s new details tease out deeper meanings in the songs. Now more prominent, the low-lit backing harmonies on Here, There and Everywhere remake the tune as an old-fashioned rock’n’roll love song; the piano bending out of key on I Want to Tell You mirrors the narrator’s insecurity; and McCartney’s booming walking bass on Taxman illuminates the biting, cynical tone of Harrison’s lyrics. ... Revolver still sounds so vibrant.- The Guardian
- Posted Oct 27, 2022
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Dry Cleaning’s second album isn’t a radical departure from last year’s outstanding New Long Leg. Florence Shaw still has the laconic, deadpan delivery of someone idly chatting over a garden fence. However, everything is slightly more refined, melodious and focused.- The Guardian
- Posted Oct 21, 2022
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That confidence is the thing that binds Midnights together. There’s a sure-footedness about Swift’s songwriting, filled with subtle, brilliant touches.- The Guardian
- Posted Oct 20, 2022
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It’s intense listening. The seven songs here last barely 30 minutes, but a powerful, concentrated half hour dose is all you need. Certainly – it’s all you need to stake a strong claim to the title of album of the year.- The Guardian
- Posted Oct 19, 2022
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The Car is an enormously tactile record, full of strange textures – a lint-roller runs over velveteen, body paint clings to legs, arms, face, and tears are cried in a tanning booth.- The Guardian
- Posted Oct 18, 2022
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Crutchfield’s [voice is] full of elasticity and billow, Williamson’s offering a sweetness and a trill. When they meet, as on the warmly unapologetic Hurricane, something magical is sprung.- The Guardian
- Posted Oct 14, 2022
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While the technology-shy, primarily guitar-based Funny in a Foreign Language doesn’t exactly represent 33-year-old Healy mellowing out, it does highlight a shift in purpose. ... Thankfully, it’s not all about painstakingly peeling the lyrical onion. I’m in Love With You is the band at their most joyously straightforward.- The Guardian
- Posted Oct 14, 2022
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Accompanying him for the hour that Reality lasts makes for an endlessly fascinating journey.- The Guardian
- Posted Oct 13, 2022
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On their fourth album, Tableau, the exploratory, ambitious side of the band’s music has never been more clear. Many of the songs pick through various genres, magpie-style, subverting expectations.- The Guardian
- Posted Oct 10, 2022
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Crucially, it doesn’t sound cynical: it's too idiosyncratic and eclectic. Instead, it sounds confident: the work of someone who knows their seemingly impulsive approach to rock and pop fits the current landscape and who’s taken that as carte blanche to do what they want. It's a confidence that never feels misplaced.- The Guardian
- Posted Oct 6, 2022
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In the end, everything from the softest improvised ballads to the most exuberantly hard-stomping blues draw grateful accolades – the sound of an audience’s thanks for a one-off music that belonged only to their presence with Jarrett, in that space, on that unique evening.- The Guardian
- Posted Oct 3, 2022
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- Critic Score
It sounds like comfort, sometimes fun, even as you miss the dark fire they once summoned.- The Guardian
- Posted Oct 3, 2022
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- Critic Score
At only eight tracks, intensely focused, it crackles with furious energy, a slow-motion film of combusting fireworks.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 30, 2022
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- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 28, 2022
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- Critic Score
Burgess says that he “fell in love with the world again” after Covid, and you can hear that across Typical Music: After This and the sublime The Centre of Me (Is a Symphony Of You) hurtle forth with all the lust for life and seemingly boundless joie de vivre of their creator.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 23, 2022
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It’s the gospel-charged 12-minute live take, Rejoice, that stuns: a collective jam opened on a beckoning bass hook and driven to a rampant finale with the band locked into an almost choral unified voice, it really tells you why, after all these years, this group can still sell out the world’s concert halls in a blink.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 22, 2022
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A solid country-pop record. It’s a celebration of endings: a fortifying, bridging album that guides its author towards, hopefully, happier times.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 20, 2022
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It’s a relentless, wilfully sugary bombardment that stands or falls by the quality of the songwriting. When the tunes are strong, it’s cheerily flimsy fun. ... When the tunes aren’t strong, listening to Demon Time feels like standing within earshot of a tween who is frantically scrolling through TikTok without earbuds, which either makes it a brilliantly constructed mirror of our times, or an album-length public nuisance, or perhaps both.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 15, 2022
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Tied together by a desire for authenticity and marked by a ferocious culmination of frustration and self-actualisation, As Above So Below is Tembo’s most cohesive body of work yet.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 8, 2022
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The songs are tightly written even when their structure tends to the episodic or their tempos shift gear. They’re also finely balanced, the choruses big and bold enough to attract attention but not overshadow the main attraction’s essential essence. Osbourne’s bleakly desperate wail is front and centre, his lyrical preoccupations intact.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 8, 2022
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If Älskar can occasionally feel identikit, there’s a refreshing honesty in its compromise between raw confessionals and acknowledging the pressure to “make it through the bullshit flying at me, write something catchy and turn it into money”.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 6, 2022
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His latest album’s confident sonic step forward – Yungblud is still very much a work in progress.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 1, 2022
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Amid some formulaic tracks, Your Life Is Mine is a welcome and superb curveball, Grogan’s darker tale of “an ocean of tears, the fury of the years” delivered over Cocteau Twins-type shimmering guitars.- The Guardian
- Posted Aug 26, 2022
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Flood is an album that requires patient and careful listening, peeling back the layers in each song to find the pulsing heart beneath. There’s nothing as immediate as the songs on Donnelly’s debut, but that’s not a bad thing – these 11 tracks ebb and flow like water, washing into and over one another to create a sense of something pure and boundless.- The Guardian
- Posted Aug 25, 2022
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Smith’s music often sounds like a dozen mobile phone ringtones going off in a video games arcade while a west African drum circle rehearse on the street outside. Occasionally, this cacophony sounds sublime.- The Guardian
- Posted Aug 22, 2022
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