Metascore
77

Generally favorable reviews - based on 15 Critic Reviews

Critic score distribution:
  1. Positive: 12 out of 15
  2. Negative: 0 out of 15
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  1. Nov 16, 2018
    83
    It does work as a bulwark against the cherry-picking, playlist-happy listening habits of the modern music fan. It works best as a complete dose of bitter medicine; a groove-happy message of fear, love, and measured hope.
  2. Dec 4, 2018
    80
    He's mined this territory before, notably in Gorillaz's Demon Days, yet the very fact that the Good, The Bad & The Queen function as a band, drawing strength from their own interplay, gives Merrie Land a human resonance that echoes long after the final song ends.
  3. Nov 21, 2018
    80
    Merrie Land feels like the perfect soundtrack for these uncertain, worrying times.
  4. Nov 16, 2018
    80
    Rich and accomplished; beautifully played and immaculately conceptualised, Albarn’s latest trip from FitzRoy to Faeroes and back, via Dogger and Dover, is a drizzle-soaked deep-dive into a fractured land and fractured people. One of the quiet highlights of the year.
  5. Mojo
    Nov 15, 2018
    80
    If any art is currently encapsulating the sense of "wrongness" abroad in our land, this is it. [Dec 2018, p.82]
  6. Q Magazine
    Nov 15, 2018
    80
    Merrie Land works best when these sounds and visions come together in an impressionistic haze. [Dec 2018, p.109]
  7. Nov 15, 2018
    80
    Albarn on Britain is a proven formula, but Simonon, Allen and Simon Tong combine to craft curious twenty-first century folk about curious twenty-first century folk.
  8. 80
    For all its gloom, Merrie Land is an entertaining and theatrical album, with vocals that capture the social observation of early album Parklife. It’s also an immensely clever feat of word painting, never relying on lyrics alone to reflect the sense of anxiety.
  9. 80
    The ten songs on this thing really are special, and worthy of the epic introduction tacked on to every article about it.
  10. Dec 5, 2018
    75
    While the Good, the Bad & the Queen are skilled at providing a wide breadth of styles here--from the woozy, carnivalesque organ of “The Last Man to Leave” to “The Truce of Twilight”’s militaristic chants--they especially succeed at conveying a crumbling and isolated Britain.
  11. Jan 7, 2019
    70
    The music performed by Allen, Simonon, and Tong, holds a strong presence on the album, necessarily complementing Albarn's lyrics while simultaneously crafting a modern folk sensibility.
  12. Uncut
    Nov 15, 2018
    70
    There's a fine line between the sincerely wistful and contemplative and the nostalgic and morose, but Merrie Land understands where the borders are and stays within them. [Jan 2019, p.18]
User Score
7.8

Generally favorable reviews- based on 29 Ratings

User score distribution:
  1. Positive: 25 out of 29
  2. Negative: 3 out of 29
  1. Nov 18, 2018
    8
    Eleven years or so were worth the wait. It's of course occurring inside of a very different context in relation to their first record, but itEleven years or so were worth the wait. It's of course occurring inside of a very different context in relation to their first record, but it keeps that immersive, eerie, playful and musically diverse atmosphere that makes their work in this format so delightful, so delicious, original. A couple of colors in the palette have changed, I guess this time around it's a bit darker, probably even more introspective than the first one. But, as I suggest, it manages to intrigue our ears on unsuspected levels with each listen. I simply love TGTBATQ, because that's exactly what made that record age so well for me, so time will tell me, eventually, if Merrie Land shall be remembered and appreciated the same way, but even not being a British person myself, I think the record is brilliant and necessary on its insights on the current socio-political landscape there. Cheers to this! Full Review »
  2. Jul 9, 2019
    8
    I can't think of any other artist whom my opinion of has changed so much over time than Damon Albarn. I still don't rate Blur's early stuffI can't think of any other artist whom my opinion of has changed so much over time than Damon Albarn. I still don't rate Blur's early stuff and I hate them at the time. Since their eponymous album in the late 90's they produced some truly great work while Albarn himself has gone on to achieve legend status. Prolific and diverse, the mans output over the last 20 years is exceptional. This particular side project is closest to his Blur work. For me, this album is Albarn tackling themes he looked at in his youth (England and Britishness) but bringing a sharper focus and more weight to it. Its like what Blur could have been doing in the first bit of the 90's if they had had 25 years experience behind them. Of course there is more than Albarn going on here. This is a super group that does the term justice with Paul Simonon (The Clash), Simon Tong (The Verve) both bringing their sublime talents to the mix along with the African rhythm of Tony Allen. Merrie Land, Lady Boston and Ribbons are standouts but the record needs to be listened to as a whole. The Tony Visconti element cannot be overlooked either with this having very much a Bowie vibe in many ways. Full Review »