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10.0
107439
10.0 |
The Skinny
A beautiful, compelling and life-affirming record about being young and confused and it's Lillie West' best work yet as Lala Lala
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8.5
107438
8.5 |
Under The Radar
What stands out most about The Lamb isn't necessarily the back-story, though. It's the humanity, the realism—the inevitable truth that we are more alone than we think we are
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8.0
107440
8.0 |
The 405
The Lamb is not a particularly light release. Neither is it nearly so grim as you might imagine. It is, above all, undefeated
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7.5
107437
7.5 |
Pitchfork
On her second album, Lillie West retains the charming simplicity of her songs, but she finds new depth as a songwriter as she explores the act of standing up to herself.
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7.4
107441
7.4 |
Paste Magazine
Mixing melancholy, reverb-filled lo-fi, indie-rock and dream-pop, West doesn’t reach for mighty, happy-go-lucky choruses, rather the choruses serve as somber, much-needed exhales often just as satisfying as stadium rock-sized refrains
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7.0
107443
7.0 |
Loud And Quiet
While the whole thing falls short of out-right redemption and self-forgiveness, there are flashes of a pop heart
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6.7
107442
6.7 |
A.V. Club
With The Lamb, West removes the shagginess of Sleepyhead and replaces it with a sharper focus, making the danceable “Spy” and the ambient wash of “Dove” all feel part of a cohesive whole
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