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10.0
137759
10.0 |
The Guardian
Despite losing a key member, the arena-filling pop-metal stars still thrill with their surprise-released new record – a masterpiece of glutted sonic mayhem
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8.0
137760
8.0 |
NME
Following multiple delays and the departure of Jordan Fish, the surprise release of this much-teased album delivers in breathtaking fashion
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8.0
137761
8.0 |
Kerrang!
Having created a monster, BMTH have proven themselves equal to matching the creative demands it’s placed on them. What a re-GeN-eration
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8.0
137763
8.0 |
Dork
Rather than a playlist of influences designed to shock, the whole record flows on the right side of chaos. One moment, Bring Me are leaders of a giddy underground rave; the next, we’re sat in a Narcotics Anonymous meeting. It’s urgent, but never oppressive
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8.0
137777
8.0 |
Clash
An album which does so much so successfully, and whose ambitions soar so high above so many of its influences, that it more than makes up for the four-year wait
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4.0
137762
4.0 |
Sputnik Music (staff)
Post Human: Nex Gen is genuinely impressive. How does one band manage to rip off Deaf Havana, Deftones, Boston Manor, Enter Shikari, Porter Robinsonbithfimtaylorswift, Green Day, Radiohead, MGK, Iggy Pop and DreamWeaver, feature Underoath, Aurora, Lil Uzi Vert, Daryl Palumbo and Glassjaw… and be this goddamn boring?
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