Hartford Courant's Scores
- Music
For 517 reviews, this publication has graded:
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62% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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36% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 2.2 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Music review score: 71
Highest review score: | Sound Of Silver | |
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Lowest review score: | Carry On |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 398 out of 517
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Mixed: 107 out of 517
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Negative: 12 out of 517
517
music
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Critic Score
White, a Wesleyan graduate, takes the best elements of punk, new wave, dub reggae and electronica and fuses them into an utterly arresting sonic pile-up different from anything else around.- Hartford Courant
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It's a gruff, sometimes paranoid album with a decidedly subjective point of view, but Rising Down cuts no corners as its tells some hard truths to a society that is only too happy to stay in the dark.- Hartford Courant
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Smile is one of the better heavy releases this year, and one of the best in the band's extensive catalog.- Hartford Courant
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The songs are pleasant enough, but they ultimately feel a bit over-thought, and Bragg often makes his best points with nothing more than his voice and an acoustic guitar.- Hartford Courant
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The only thing missing, really, is the visual context. That's a big piece of some of these songs--it is a TV show, after all--but even so, Flight of the Conchords the album is a thorough, and thoroughly entertaining, overview of Flight of the Conchords the band.- Hartford Courant
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Dig, Lazarus, Dig!!! is even more entertainingly disturbing, a rocking psycho-carnival ride (complete with swirling organ) that clearly nods to Cave's roots.- Hartford Courant
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However much Los Campesinos! need a good editor--both for its music and lyrics--a red pen would only ruin the fun.- Hartford Courant
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With its varied sound and newly expansive songwriting, "Attack & Release" is a bold but entirely fitting way for the Black Keys to prove they know more than one way to make a statement.- Hartford Courant
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At its best, Keep It Simple is a comforting dispatch from the fairyland where folky soul Morrison masterpieces like 1971's "Tupelo Honey" were born.- Hartford Courant
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The Sword has avoided the dreaded sophomore slump and delivered a CD that builds on its debut with heavier riffs and a better sense of dynamics.- Hartford Courant
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The band reassembles its signature elements and evaporates concerns about age by showing some fresh spring-loaded party pop.- Hartford Courant
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Adam Duritz and company haven’t sounded so committed, so determined, so tuneful, in years.- Hartford Courant
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The Heavy shines best on stage, where the band is an overwhelming force, but Great Vengeance is an entrancing peek at crush-worthy musical raw power.- Hartford Courant
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Midnight Boom" opens with its excellent first two singles, "U.R.A. Fever" and the danceable "Cheap And Cheerful," and from there things get pretty sleepy until the cheerfully blown-out "M.E.X.I.C.O.," a 97-second anthem so catchy that you'll get a callous on your thumb from skipping back to it.- Hartford Courant
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The band's previous entry, 2006's "Destroyer's Rubies," was impressive enough, but Trouble In Dreams is even better.- Hartford Courant
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Though these songs, like 'Feeling Better,' are the album's goofiest, they present the band at its most sincere, celebrating the vitality, if not the emotional immaturity, that precedes one's 20th birthday.- Hartford Courant
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The duo’s modern take on a classic sound runs throughout the new record, a worthy 13-song sophomore effort.- Hartford Courant
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Featuring 10 originals and three covers (including an unlisted version of 'Swing Low, Sweet Chariot'), the album is a showcase for Deschanel’s pipes and Ward’s clever musical arrangements.- Hartford Courant
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- Hartford Courant
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Robotique Majestique is compelling and eminently danceable, and it has as much visceral kick as cerebral appeal for the indie dance kids who demand both.- Hartford Courant
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Some connect better than others, and the album feels a little front-loaded, but it's still a treat to hear Malkmus get in touch with his inner guitar hero.- Hartford Courant
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The collection's 17-song canvas is sufficiently broad to hold the spirited, honky tonk-laced jaunt of the title track and the softly pulsating, organ-laced gospel of 'If Jesus Walked the World Today.'- Hartford Courant
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Fans of Dulli and Lanegan should happily devour the Gutter Twins, but even better, newcomers are in for a smooth, memorable introduction to two of the darker characters in rock today.- Hartford Courant
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Her third album, collects 11 new songs that document Edwards’ growth from singer who writes songs to bona fide songwriter who has embraced the art of subtlety.- Hartford Courant
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Seventh Tree is the inevitable comedown, a pastoral holiday that trades glittery hedonism for quiet contemplation.- Hartford Courant
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Merritt dials back her soul-shouter instinct on her third album, a collection that finds her balancing restraint with the vivid emotionalism that has driven her music from the start.- Hartford Courant
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American Music Club return with a quieter but no less excellent addition to a catalog that stretches back to 1985.- Hartford Courant
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