No Ripcord's Scores
- Music
For 2,726 reviews, this publication has graded:
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43% higher than the average critic
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3% same as the average critic
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54% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 2.8 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Music review score: 70
Score distribution:
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Positive: 1,899 out of 2726
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Mixed: 751 out of 2726
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Negative: 76 out of 2726
2726
music
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Critic Score
On the surface, Haiku Hands is a party record, but dig deeper and it becomes a powerful testament to female friendship and the power you feel when you’re supported.- No Ripcord
- Posted Oct 23, 2020
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They play to a more jangle-pop register on the bouncy Public Bodies before bringing back the fuzzy guitars and haunting tones on What We Do It For. The only throughline here is that the songs themselves are interesting indie-rock.- No Ripcord
- Posted Oct 23, 2020
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Is Ohms the return to form that meets expectations? Well, yes, even if the tunes haven't changed so much as the vastly-superior production has (with producer Terry Date back into the fold). But it also reinforces the fact that Deftones have stuck to a back-to-basics formula through all these years; the only difference now being that everyone else is taking notice.- No Ripcord
- Posted Oct 23, 2020
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A muted and detailed project that doesn’t feel like a grand statement or treatise—just a collection of lovely little songs.- No Ripcord
- Posted Oct 23, 2020
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By the end of closer Thirsty Tulips, it should be no wonder that Mattimore is signed to Ghostly International, a traditionally electronic music label. She makes ambient music better than the music that most ambient musicians are putting out these days.- No Ripcord
- Posted Oct 23, 2020
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Clearly, songs is the more developed album of the pairing here and one that those already under Lenker’s spell will treasure and contrast to her earlier work.- No Ripcord
- Posted Oct 23, 2020
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Keep It Flowers is an edgy, brash, and well put together statement that mostly goes down easy.- No Ripcord
- Posted Oct 19, 2020
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These guys are still writing and playing at the top of their game, making another album that’s just as brutal as Stage Four, if not a little more palatable for everyday listening.- No Ripcord
- Posted Oct 9, 2020
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A beautiful and steady album about defying the roles others put you in and pondering what went wrong. It’s a heartbreaking project as well, peppered with upbeat but cutting songs. It may not be Loveless’s best album -- Real is impossible to beat -- but it ideally captures the indescribable greatness of her songwriting.- No Ripcord
- Posted Oct 7, 2020
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Despite Live Forever not being perfect, Bartees Strange swings for the fences on every song here. It’s exciting just to watch it unfold in front of your eyes.- No Ripcord
- Posted Oct 7, 2020
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This latest offering from Fleet Foxes embodies their entire catalog of folksy sounds, seasons it with some jazzy elements, and pares down some bloat (only one track over five minutes). Perhaps the only surface flaw of this album is that certain songs build too quickly and fade too fast.- No Ripcord
- Posted Oct 5, 2020
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he annoying melodrama that made his rap material so exhausting is what gives his new music some real power. For the first time ever, the instrumentation suits Baker’s natural whine.- No Ripcord
- Posted Oct 1, 2020
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The Ascension bobs along in a meandering sea of drum machine and synth pads, waiting for something to latch on to. It never takes long; Stevens has the ideas and they hit relentlessly, moving on and doubling over before you’ve had half a chance to process them.- No Ripcord
- Posted Sep 29, 2020
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No gripes here as IDLES deliver their most consistent album to date with a handful of their most rough-cut diamonds sparkling through.- No Ripcord
- Posted Sep 21, 2020
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The Universal Want's strengths lie in a series of inspired moments rather than it coming together as a satisfying whole.- No Ripcord
- Posted Sep 21, 2020
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From subtle synth stabs to soft rock explorations, Hamilton and Thomas open their songwriting possibilities by paying attention to nuance. It's in those shadings that their music takes shape: slowly but surely, and with unassuming confidence.- No Ripcord
- Posted Sep 8, 2020
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His talent for frank, moderately depressing songwriting is still displayed, but the new album doesn’t have quite the candor and quality of his first full-length.- No Ripcord
- Posted Sep 8, 2020
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While it seemingly ends in the same place it starts (Bognanno singing on loop “I don’t know what I wanted” isn’t really a positive ending), this is Bully’s best project yet, lacing all of their marvelous qualities into a candid and catchy molotov cocktail.- No Ripcord
- Posted Aug 28, 2020
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Seemingly straight out of 1970, The Making of You is a lovely album to which to reminisce about pre-pandemic times.- No Ripcord
- Posted Aug 25, 2020
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These songs work as an extension of himself—coming from one of indie rock's most literate songwriters—delivered with thoughtful compassion and no shortage of ambition.- No Ripcord
- Posted Aug 20, 2020
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Despite the weak ending, Imploding the Mirage is a powerful album from a hungrier and more passionate Killers that have once again embraced bombast with fearlessness, aspiration, and confidence. You can hear the band prevailing over struggles and finding the joy in making music and being alive.- No Ripcord
- Posted Aug 19, 2020
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All in all, A Celebration of Endings is a curious, often potent blend of sounds and influences. While lyrically dark, its exploration is more often than not a very satisfying ride into the unknown.- No Ripcord
- Posted Aug 17, 2020
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One of her most consistent and wonderful collections of unique, heartfelt, and depressing songs yet, even if it’s somewhat hampered by the need to make it “as cathartic and minimal as possible.” While Andrew Sarlo’s production is occasionally sedate, the writing is still exemplary.- No Ripcord
- Posted Aug 10, 2020
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Despite its slightly misfiring concept, Beyond The Pale remains an enjoyable hour spent inside the world of one of Britain’s most revered songwriters—even if you're never quite sure what your host was meant to be showing you.- No Ripcord
- Posted Aug 10, 2020
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A Hero's Death is not about growth: it's a band assessing where they stand as rising up-and-comers and having the impulse to express themselves differently. Maybe their sulking comes with a bit of affectation, but at least it's a convincing portrait of keeping true to themselves—soaking in everything that surrounds them.- No Ripcord
- Posted Aug 3, 2020
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Ultimately, The Balladeer is a solidly enjoyable record, one that captures McKenna’s voice and style nearly perfectly.- No Ripcord
- Posted Jul 28, 2020
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What it lacks in polish it all but makes up for in immediacy—and lots and lots of raw power. She didn't just get out of a potentially sticky situation; she thrived and found a way to turn it into an advantage with great songwriting panache.- No Ripcord
- Posted Jul 22, 2020
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Maybe the lyrics fall a little on the simplistic side, which is frustrating considering the themes here can be pretty bleak despite the sunny and airy sound. But overall, Devastator is a more than enjoyable return for a band that always felt deserved more attention.- No Ripcord
- Posted Jul 21, 2020
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It may not come across as immediately ambitious as her previous work, but there are no tricks or gimmicks that create this intimacy; it’s just clever production and writing that never outstays its welcome.- No Ripcord
- Posted Jul 20, 2020
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Delicate and lovely new project, one that chronicles a relationship blooming and decaying in equal time.- No Ripcord
- Posted Jul 20, 2020
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