
- Summary: The fifth release for the British experimental folk collective is its first recorded with all six members present at the studio.
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- Record Label: Full Time Hobby
- Genre(s): Folk, Pop/Rock, Alternative/Indie Rock, Indie Rock, Indie Electronic, Indie Pop, Acid Folk
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Score distribution:
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Positive: 10 out of 13
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Mixed: 3 out of 13
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Negative: 0 out of 13
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MagnetJul 17, 2013The group has managed to retain a sense of innocence, freshness and pure joy in the act of creation. [No. 100, p.59]
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Jul 2, 2013Turbines has them sounding more like a band and less like a studio project, but around their psychedelic boy-girl harmonies, circling guitar lines and insidiously weird lyrics, there are still plenty of analogue gurgles and swoops and strange, dubwise production finesse
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Jun 14, 2013It's such a nuanced album that it can feel undemonstrative, with even the choruses lacking impact--but that, too, typifies a place where nothing is what it first seems.
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MojoJul 10, 2013An affecting release, it demands repeated plays, emerging as canorous, sly and bewitching. [Aug 2013, p.90]
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Jun 17, 2013Their fifth album (strung together by a loose concept about an imagined village you needn’t worry about) is as softly satisfying as a bobbly old jumper. One with thumbholes.
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Jun 17, 2013It’s reassuring to note that, now five albums in, Tunng continue to distill and refine their sound, honing their craft to create their most accomplished album yet.
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Q MagazineJul 10, 2013As it stands, the lack of genuine emotion here does the musical invention shown on Turbines a disservice, and ultimately delivers Tunng's least satisfactory album to date. [Aug 2013, p.107]
Score distribution:
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Positive: 0 out of
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Mixed: 0 out of
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Negative: 0 out of