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The American online music publication Pitchfork has awarded a perfect score of 10 to more than 50 albums. Most of the scores were given in retrospective reviews of classic albums or reissues . [ 1 ] Artists who have received perfect scores on release include Radiohead , Fiona Apple , Kanye West , Bonnie "Prince" Billy , And You Will Know Us by ...
Mind Hive is the seventeenth studio album from English art punk band Wire, released on 24 January 2020 by Pinkflag. [6] The release was preceded by a music video for "Cactused" made up of clips from the forthcoming documentary People in a Film [7] and streaming audio for "Primed and Ready". [8]
Wire's debut album, Pink Flag (1977) – "perhaps the most original debut album to come out of the first wave of British punk", according to AllMusic [4] – contains songs that are diverse in mood and style, but most use a minimalist punk approach combined with unorthodox structures. [5] "Field Day for the Sundays", for example, is only 28 ...
The discography of Wire, an English rock band, consists of seventeen studio albums, twenty-six live albums, eleven compilation albums, eleven EPs, and twenty-four singles. Albums [ edit ]
Many reviewers noted the album's melodic sensibility, [7] [10] [16] with AllMusic writing, "Object 47 highlights Wire's pop credentials, but the band hasn't lost its edge." [6] Stereogum ranked it 12th (out of 15) in their 2015 "Wire Albums from Worst to Best" list, saying that it is "the most normal sounding album from a band interested in being anything but."
Wire is the self-titled fourteenth studio album by British post-punk band Wire. It was released on 13 April 2015 through the band's Pinkflag label. It was released on 13 April 2015 through the band's Pinkflag label.
Pink Flag is the debut album by the British post-punk band Wire.It was released in November 1977 through Harvest Records. [1] The album was critically acclaimed on release, and has since been highly influential; today it is regarded as a landmark in the development of post-punk music.
[5] BBC Music called the album a "glorious avant-pop coup" and (referring to the 2006 edition of the album) "the most satisfying of the three reissues [the others being Pink Flag and 154]." [17] In 2004, Pitchfork listed Chairs Missing as 33rd best album of the 1970s. [18] In 2013, NME listed the album as the 394th greatest album of all time. [19]