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9.0
128491
9.0 |
musicOMH
It’s their strongest record in years
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8.0
128443
8.0 |
Loud And Quiet
Less an album, more a vessel: a surreally radio-friendly meditation to swim within
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8.0
128444
8.0 |
Under The Radar
The six-piece enters its third decade as a band with a truncated name, but what hasn’t changed, as Sea Power sails into a new chapter, is its indomitable creative spirit
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8.0
128445
8.0 |
The Arts Desk
The music is propulsively joyous, hymning love and nature over capitalism and power
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8.0
128469
8.0 |
The Quietus
Re-united with producer Graham Sutton, the new Sea Power album may be their best in a decade
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8.0
128564
8.0 |
Evening Standard
While the band’s seventh album is unlikely to banish their cult status, these dynamic, grandiose anthems are worth getting to know
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8.0
128582
8.0 |
NME
The Brighton band – notably having dropped the word 'British' from their moniker – return with a brutal but beautiful album that we can all relate to now
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8.0
128587
8.0 |
A.V. Club
A wonderful, absorbing listen by a truly special group
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7.4
128606
7.4 |
Pitchfork
More than two decades into its career, the band formerly known as British Sea Power sounds newly energized, eagerly plotting new routes to familiar emotional peaks
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7.0
128514
7.0 |
Gigwise
When they hit, they really hit
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7.0
128546
7.0 |
Vinyl Chapters
A hugely enjoyable indie-rock album filled with creativity and passion, even if not everything lands as smooth as it could have
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6.0
128550
6.0 |
Dork
A mature, deliberate force, from starry-eyed opener ‘Scaring At The Sky’ onwards
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6.0
128500
6.0 |
God Is In The TV
If this is an exercise in Sea Power rediscovering their capacity to be spine-tingling, its an effective, if patchy, one
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