The Independent (UK)'s Scores
- Music
For 2,195 reviews, this publication has graded:
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47% higher than the average critic
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4% same as the average critic
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49% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 3 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Music review score: 70
Highest review score: | Hit Me Hard and Soft | |
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Lowest review score: | Donda |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 1,177 out of 2195
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Mixed: 989 out of 2195
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Negative: 29 out of 2195
2195
music
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Critic Score
The result emulates, and equals, Joanna Newsom’s Divers, another ambitious album about the inescapable inter-connectedness of love and death.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Jun 29, 2016
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Cypress Hill are the hippies of the hip hop world, making music surrounded by a green-tinged haze that takes more cues from classic Sixties and Seventies rock than anywhere else. Elephants on Acid is one hell of a trip.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Sep 27, 2018
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Rather than phone anything in, Cooper’s clearly making the most of his elder statesman position, finding new ways to freshen up vintage sounds and styles. He’s every bit as durable as the American city he celebrates.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Feb 26, 2021
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Deforming Lobes is unpredictable and invigorating--the best representation of Segall’s restless creativity to date, not to mention the most fun to listen to.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Mar 28, 2019
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The album loses some momentum around the more generic “Strangers”. But even with that song, the harmonies are hard to resist. It’s the best pop comeback – and likely one of the best pop albums – of the year.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Jun 7, 2019
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“How long will it take to break the plans that I never make?” It’s a question that was inevitably begged by those previous celebrations of low-rent outlaw glamour, and, in attempting to answer it, Suede may have made their best album.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Jan 20, 2016
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Zeffira's facility with reeds, keys and strings ensures constantly interesting textural shifts, while the combination of Badwan's imperious, Scott Walker-esque baritone and Zeffira's varied vocal stylings recalls not just Lee Hazlewood & Nancy Sinatra but even the effervescent charm of The B-52s.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Apr 18, 2011
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Irish folk quartet Lankum’s second album offers an object lesson in how to perform old songs in new ways, without losing the essential sense of continuity that gives traditional music its timeless appeal.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Oct 26, 2017
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For the most part the songs are full to bursting with youthful melodies that lift the weight off the more serious of topics.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Jan 5, 2017
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Musically, it’s lovely – loose, swirling California rock and country, led by gaze-out-the-train-window melodies. ... This album will leave a mark – one that is Moore’s and Moore’s alone.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Mar 5, 2020
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The first line of the first song encapsulates the adolescent angst which blossomed over and over throughout the band's career, with varying degrees of wit, empathy, contempt and self-pity.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Jan 3, 2012
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Threads is a culmination of virtually every sound Crow has explored through her career, which began with her crafting ad jingles in the late Eighties.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Aug 29, 2019
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Off Off On stakes out the Winchester-born, Paris-based Stables as one of the most original and musically gifted artists of today.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Oct 22, 2020
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- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Sep 11, 2015
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- Critic Score
Isles invites you to close your eyes and let your alpha waves throw their own shapes.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Jan 21, 2021
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Listening to it feels like fleeing from a warehouse rave. Just like lockdown itself, How I’m Feeling Now can be overwhelming – panic-inducing, even – when taken as a whole. But there are snatches of brilliance here, and as perhaps the very first album to be produced under lockdown, it is really quite an achievement.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted May 15, 2020
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- Critic Score
Circuital opens with a gong and orchestral fanfare, appropriately so for what may be My Morning Jacket's best album.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Jun 6, 2011
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- Critic Score
Where Black America Again was notable for its sharp, observational urgency, Let Love feels far more personal, and softer in tone. Common’s optimistic nature gives it an uplifting vibe.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Aug 29, 2019
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- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Jul 12, 2011
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- Critic Score
The most pungent aroma rising from Juju's avant-jazz dub-trance grooves is that of a funkier Mahavishnu Orchestra.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Aug 2, 2011
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- Critic Score
The continuing appeal of AC/DC lies in the fact that this self-proclaimed bunch of “noisy little guys” consistently sound like they’re having good-hearted, OTT fun.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Nov 12, 2020
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Costello’s peerless lyricism often mirrors his tone, and here it’s suitably refined.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Oct 11, 2018
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- Critic Score
There is a strangely addictive quality to hearing something quite so aggressively sui generis as this.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Nov 30, 2012
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The arrangements on Barry Adamson's latest album seem more restrained than usual, his jazz-noir ambitions trimmed to a blues-funk palette of bass and drum grooves carrying Hammond organ or piano parts, with just the occasional solo horn part.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Feb 14, 2012
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- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Jun 14, 2013
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- Critic Score
There's nothing wildly inventive about her modern take on the vintage vibe. But it’s nonstop fun.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Nov 5, 2020
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- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Nov 14, 2011
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- Critic Score
Go-Go Boots is the promised "R&B Murder Ballad Album" recorded concurrently with last year's The Big To-Do, and it's every bit as good as that description suggests.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Feb 14, 2011
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- Critic Score
It’s their most accomplished clawing-back so far of the basic dark rock’n’roll street-smarts that were lost as they cast fruitlessly around for new directions with projects like the acoustic album Howl and the awful noise-scape effort The Effects Of 333 (their very own Metal Machine Music).- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Jan 11, 2018
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Laura Marling continues to impress on her third outing, though the transatlantic influences are becoming more apparent.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Sep 9, 2011
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She sings like she’s falling apart, but the quality of the album suggests she’s got it together.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted May 27, 2022
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The songs on Everything is Beautiful, by contrast [to Everything Sucks], are warm and sun-dappled; reminiscent of the uplifting, gospel-influenced hip hop of Chance the Rapper.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Mar 9, 2020
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Perhaps the most wonderful thing about Senjutsu is just how much fun the band are having. It’s an album built to entertain, full of theatre, full of gold-standard musicianship. They keep things neat at 10 tracks, but when they do indulge themselves a little, it’s worth it.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Sep 2, 2021
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Their sixth album, Marauder, is their most experimental to date, blending everything from rough garage rock to Motown rhythms. They’re reinvigorated, brimming with energy and self-assurance.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Aug 23, 2018
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Soberish is a record of push and pull, of doubt and regained confidence. ... Phair is the queen of rock reinvention, and as this album proves, she’s got a few lives left.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Jun 3, 2021
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- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Nov 26, 2012
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- Critic Score
It belongs in that hour when the sunlight dims, everyone leaves the park, the disposable barbecues are smoking abortively, the makeshift Lilt bottle bong's started to taste like shit and you don't know whether to go back to bed or fritter away your last tenner in town.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Mar 24, 2015
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- Critic Score
Overall, it’s a collection primarily concerned with the somatic rather than cerebral sides of Richard James’s music, overdosing somewhat on staccato, bouncing synth twangs and jittery drum’n’bass beats.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Sep 19, 2014
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- Critic Score
Featuring a blend of standards and originals spiced with judicious covers of sometimes obscure indie tracks, it manages to sustain a mood and attitude throughout without offering too many hostages to homogeneity.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Jan 3, 2012
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Throughout, there's a fresh impetus to Tricky's musical muse that enables his dark imaginings to connect again with beautiful simplicity.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted May 24, 2013
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It may lack cohesion at certain points, but one thing is never in doubt: Minaj is still one of the best in her field.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Aug 12, 2018
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- Critic Score
Recorded over a week in New York, Everything Sucks is the brash, unapologetic sister to the more sensitive Everything is Beautiful.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Mar 9, 2020
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- Critic Score
It’s entirely delightful, and Andy Bell has never sung better, discovering his “inner choirboy” again.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Dec 30, 2013
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It’s pure rock and roll: sleazy, slick and lots of fun. Sound & Fury marks another milestone for a remarkable artist.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Sep 26, 2019
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Bookended by “Frau Tomium”, a bleep-tastic tribute to electronic pioneer Oskar Sala, Toy could have come from any time in Yello’s career, so resilient are their tropes.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Sep 28, 2016
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Southeastern finds him working in a more stripped-down manner which focuses attention firmly on his songs. Fortunately, they're brilliant: vivid, multi-faceted tales of souls adrift.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Oct 4, 2013
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His vocals are by far the album’s most potent aspect, bringing grace and wonder even to the more routine material, and hoisting the better songs to classic status.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Mar 25, 2016
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Del Rey’s deliciously twisted pop fuses hip hop beats with her breathy vocal delivery; their mutual power is in their ability to keep things hidden, whilst seeming utterly explicit. It’s a heady mix to be caught up in.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Jul 21, 2017
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- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Aug 27, 2019
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Tegan and Sara’s last album, 2016’s Love You To Death, was a bold stadium-pop record; this one is less polished, but just as punchy. ... Most people read their teenage diary and cringe. With Hey I’m Just Like You, Tegan and Sara have painstakingly, tenderly, written theirs out again.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Sep 26, 2019
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he record is a confident immersion into a genre he’s only toyed with before. And just as Good Thing never fully sacrificed Bridges’ style, neither does Gold-Digger forget his roots.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Jul 22, 2021
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- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Feb 12, 2021
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- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Mar 15, 2018
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Eight albums in, and some of that edgy math-rock experimentalism has been lost, along with two original members of Leon Bridges’ band. But what they now lack in raw, ferocious edginess, they make up for glorious driving riff on Performance.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Aug 23, 2018
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What’s impressive is how Thundercat makes this music, with its complex structures and zigzagging rhythms, so human.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Apr 1, 2020
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- Critic Score
Working with a lo-fi palette of mostly acoustic instruments, they’ve conjured a weird wonderland in which Angela Carter meets Bjork round at Robert Wyatt’s.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Jun 23, 2016
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Few songwriters can juggle seriousness and whimsy as adeptly as Paul Simon on Stranger To Stranger, his best album in several years.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Jun 1, 2016
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The past typically isn’t the most comfortable place to inhabit, but Swift embodies her younger self fully, imbuing these tracks with the same immediacy and emotional heft as she did all those years ago. Country twang or not.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Jul 7, 2023
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Thanks to the remarkable instrument that is Furler's voice: huge but fragile, fearlessly ragged and wild, seemingly a conduit of a tumultuous past that has included drug addiction and mental health issues, it perfectly counterpoints her songs' robust construction in a way that makes you wish she kept every song she wrote for herself.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Jan 27, 2016
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Despite the occasional challenge of big blasts of (gleefully disruptive) discord on tracks such as “trolle-gabba”, those considering dipping a toe into avant garde pop will find the waters are warm on Fossora. Give it time – it’ll grow on you. Like a fungus.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Sep 30, 2022
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- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Jul 16, 2020
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Musically, Dark Matter is some of their catchiest and punchiest material in years. It’ll have you nodding your head – but it’ll never let you get comfortable.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Apr 18, 2024
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- Critic Score
Accompanied by a crack hometown band for whom the intricacies of New Orleans’ distinctive second-line rhythms are clearly second nature, it’s a parade of infectious funk and soul right from the moment Bruce Springsteen romps through “Right Place Wrong Time”, to the Doctor’s closing roll through “I Walk On Guilded Splinters” and “Such A Night”.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Nov 28, 2016
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Commontime is full of engaging ideas and genial character, by some distance the most assured and complete of Field Music’s releases.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Feb 5, 2016
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Fuelled by a black humour that’s almost become her trademark, there’s heartbreak and ecstasy, desire, fear, uncertainty, acting on impulse, making mistakes and (maybe) learning from them. And those are tunes we can definitely dance to.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Jun 16, 2017
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The simpler arrangements allow more room for Rhys's sleek harmonies to drive his whimsical wordplay: accordingly, the album has the lush, beguiling charm of a sun-kissed soft-rock album by The Beach Boys or The Young Rascals.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Feb 24, 2011
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The song order mirrors the real-life messiness of dismantling a past relationship while falling in love with someone new. ... She frequently weaponises her voice, snarling and howling her pain into the ether; on the French-spoken piano ballad “Falaise de Malaise”, though, she is whisperingly vulnerable. What an extraordinary artist Martha Wainwright is.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Aug 19, 2021
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On Everything Hits at Once, the Austin-formed indie veterans have compiled a glimmering collection of songs that date back to 2001’s Girls Can Tell, or are as recent as to come from 2017’s Hot Thoughts. There’s also a brand-new song, closer “No Bullets Spent” (built using parts from “Dracula’s Cigarette” of their Get Nice! EP), which is a low-simmering take on power and corruption.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Jul 29, 2019
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Dave Alvin's latest album may be his best yet, its tales of the flipside of the American Dream set to gritty blues riffs that speak of long months on the road.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Jul 8, 2011
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An album that’s as enchanting as it is astute, from a band to treasure.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Mar 4, 2020
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At its best, on “Ride My Dub”, “Expanding Dub” and “Call It Dub”, the results offer snatched glimpses of the eternal in the fleeting moment. Even better than its parent album.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Jan 24, 2014
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The meringue-light and snow-bright Visions is a sort of cut-up, laptronica take on the kind of sugary, girly electro-pop confections Prince produced for a succession of female starlets in the late 1980s.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Mar 12, 2012
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On her third album, the self-titled Kelsea, she finds a balance between the two. There’s more than a hint of early Taylor Swift on perky opener “Overshare”, while “Club” is as uplifting a “not going out” song as you could hope for.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Mar 20, 2020
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"Moving" apes the shameless anthemic yearning of Coldplay, and "A Different Room" has the windy bluster of U2. But it's the tiredness of the songwriting that cripples Where You Stand.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Aug 15, 2013
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Whatever style he uses on this first solo album in more than two decades, from country-blues to croon, rock’n’roll to reggae, he sustains that character as a unifying thread.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Sep 18, 2015
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Their brusque punk-pop style and his louche intonation suggest a tidier version of the Libertines.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Jan 24, 2014
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It's ironic that soul music dominates, given Collins' lack of its most crucial element: a commanding vocal presence.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Mar 22, 2013
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- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Feb 8, 2011
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Six years on from the vivacious Bang Goes The Knighthood, Neil Hannon’s latest Divine Comedy outing seems to lack the bite which gives the best of his work its raffish frisson.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Sep 1, 2016
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Ono’s continued Flower Power philosophy--“People of America, when will we see?” goes “Now or Never”--feels simplistic at a time when artists are so used to deconstructing the social and political systems that Ono rails against. And so Warzone falls into a strange dichotomy: as the album closes with a version of “Imagine” that is hymn-like enough to sound like the heralding of a new dawn, the relevance of Ono’s protests feels as if it’s faded.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Oct 18, 2018
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State sees Todd Rundgren deliver his customary laconic commentaries on a world gone mad from behind a wall of rock, techno and dubstep riffs.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Apr 11, 2013
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Interspersed with vox-pop musings on matters like police shootings, The Last Days Of Oakland is a state-of-the-nation address akin to Sky Stone’s There’s A Riot Goin’ On.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Jun 23, 2016
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- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Nov 30, 2020
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“Rituals” is Lipstate’s tribute to Steve Reich’s Music For 18 Musicians, its arpeggiating guitar lines intertwining hypnotically, while the opening “Deep Shelter” takes a different approach, its lowing drones sliding over each other in Terry Riley-esque manner, seeking rhythmic pulses behind sheets of high, keening tones.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Feb 8, 2017
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It’s not always pretty--his blast of antipathy “Can’t Stand You” is just relentless disparagement, with none of the subtlety of “Positively 4th Street”; ultimately, it’s small wonder to find him, in “Poor Traits Of The Artist”, caught between loving and hating his need to create.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Feb 13, 2017
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Musically it’s standard rockin’ country fare, save for the poignant tints of accordion applied to “Homecoming Queen”.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Jan 24, 2014
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They're virtually unrecognisable as the band that made their game-changing debut, save perhaps for "All the Time."- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Mar 22, 2013
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Halfway through, as guest rappers stop littering the proceedings, the album does a 90-degree shift and becomes a banging club affair, stuffed with David Guetta-style synth-stompers.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Apr 5, 2012
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- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Jan 24, 2014
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- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Jul 18, 2012
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- Critic Score
Melancholy of tone, it occasionally attains the antique industry of Michael Nyman's early Peter Greenaway scores, but the overall effect is more akin to the musical equivalent of a mock-tudorbethan semi.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted May 4, 2012
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Originally planned as the second half of a double-album, Lupercalia is his most approachable effort.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Jun 16, 2011
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It’s been 20 years since David Crosby’s last solo offering, but Croz finds his fire undimmed, and his freak flag still proudly flying, if slightly tattered.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Jan 24, 2014
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Pink Friday 2 shows flashes of the inventive brilliance that made Nicki such an undeniable superstar, but like so many legacy sequels, it mostly just makes you wish you were listening to the original.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Dec 8, 2023
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He avoids turning the songs on this album into as much of a box-ticking exercise as they felt on earlier records, managing to weave influences in with a little more flair.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Oct 28, 2021
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What's impressive is the consistency of approach and execution.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Dec 12, 2011
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An album of fresh pleasures is the pay-off, but don’t come looking to it for substance.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Jan 12, 2015
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On this album, you find yourself drifting in and out. She tackles trolls, racism, overpopulation and the internet age. You crave solutions as each track closes, or perhaps more of those sublime, witty character studies she offered on Let Them Eat Chaos.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Jun 13, 2019
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It’s musically ambitious, if over-stuffed at times, but unashamedly impenetrable lyrically, even with the “help” of the accompanying gobbledegook short-story and supposed Map of Eyeland.- The Independent (UK)
- Posted Jun 15, 2016
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