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8.0
137485
8.0 |
All Music
After nearly a decade of varying output and an uncertain direction, Reasonable Woman gets Sia back on track, joining Fear and Acting as one of the most compelling and listenable efforts in her post-breakthrough catalog - a huge relief for anyone who thought she had lost her touch
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8.0
137489
8.0 |
The Arts Desk
There is always part of me that will search for the rawness, individuality and quirk-pop oddities of her early work
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6.0
137486
6.0 |
musicOMH
The Australian star’s latest is full of soaring pop anthems which are easy to sing along to, and proof that she can still hit the high marks
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6.0
137487
6.0 |
Rolling Stone
Her first album in three years, Reasonable Woman, is also solid, a return to the aesthetic mean that works more than it doesn’t. None of the singles released from it so far have been hits, but they’re all resolutely competent examples of Sia’s knack for sweeping, feelings-heavy glitz
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5.5
137509
5.5 |
Pitchfork
The Australian hitmaker’s 10th studio album is an overproduced amalgamation of disco, hip-hop, and radio pop that even Sia’s gale-force delivery can only carry so far
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4.5
137515
4.5 |
Beats Per Minute
She enlists help from guest artists and DJs to encapsulate the past six years – but there’s no innovation or originality
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4.4
137523
4.4 |
Sputnik Music (staff)
A frustrating, calculated mishmash of pop powerhouses, balladry and dance music, but are either underdeveloped, overdeveloped, or just plain bad
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4.0
137488
4.0 |
The Guardian
The Australian hitmaker reaches for moments of brilliance on her 10th studio album. But too often it plays like generic inspiration
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