Metascore
79

Generally favorable reviews - based on 11 Critics

Critic score distribution:
  1. Positive: 10 out of 11
  2. Negative: 0 out of 11
Buy On
  1. Feb 15, 2019
    80
    All in all, an accomplished return, and a welcome and relatable one for these dismal times.
  2. Feb 15, 2019
    80
    A welcome return, Ladytron is a remarkably consistent and engaging album that befits the band's status as synth pop veterans.
  3. Feb 15, 2019
    80
    Their eponymous return is an immersive, invigorating and convincingly brooding stomp of disenfranchisement.
  4. Mojo
    Feb 12, 2019
    80
    Their sixth album shows them shaping the grim thoughts of The Animals and The Island into poised, potent songs. [Mar 2019, p.96]
  5. Q Magazine
    Feb 12, 2019
    80
    Their finest record since 2002's Light & Magic, Ladytron achieve near perfection here. [Apr 2019, p.114]
  6. Feb 15, 2019
    77
    Every Ladytron album has a few extremely low points, and on Ladytron those are “Run” (a part two to “The Animals,” not a particularly necessary one) and “Paper Highways” (the first part is great, as if wrought from iron wreckage, but it veers into a saccharine, completely misplaced chorus, like they handed it to Disney for a second). Much better as a ray of solace is the quietly experimental “Tomorrow Is Another Day.”
  7. 75
    Long term fans won’t learn anything new here, but a good Ladytron album is better than no Ladytron album, and seeing how they didn't even seem to exist a few years ago, this is something to be thankful for.
  8. Uncut
    Feb 12, 2019
    70
    While the singles "Until The Fire" and "The Animals" are satisfyingly sleek and sinister, Lady tron seem most energised when they head deep into the darkness in the starkly Numan-ist "Paper Highways" and "Deadzone." [Mar 2019, p.29]
  9. Feb 12, 2019
    70
    At 13 songs it's an eventful ride and one that takes repeated listens to really click but once it does, Ladytron makes all the right noises in all the right places.
  10. Feb 14, 2019
    65
    The songs are densely packed with buzzy synth frameworks that act as a base to launch swirling atmospherical textures that form like storm clouds around the cool bass grooves lurking underneath. Where the mechanical beats lack melody, the impassive vocals provide it, making good on the band's name.
  11. Feb 13, 2019
    60
    This is a record that feels handcrafted for the fans that waited so long for new material. Had you already previously invested in their icy yet sleek sound, then Ladytron is a welcome, if not wholly groundbreaking, return.
User Score
7.3

Generally favorable reviews- based on 14 Ratings

User score distribution:
  1. Positive: 10 out of 14
  2. Negative: 3 out of 14
  1. Feb 15, 2019
    9
    This album is really interesting. The production is a perfect mix of synth-pop, pop-rock, alternative and electronic. I love this style andThis album is really interesting. The production is a perfect mix of synth-pop, pop-rock, alternative and electronic. I love this style and this kind of making music. Full Review »
  2. Feb 16, 2019
    9
    Ladytron is a magnificent return and in my view, surpisingly, their most consistently engrossing album. The three pre-released singles are allLadytron is a magnificent return and in my view, surpisingly, their most consistently engrossing album. The three pre-released singles are all in the first half of the album. They are intricate and layered. Although the lyrical content and tone are dark, there is a euphoric, trance-like element to the instrumentation. Until the Fire and Tower of Glass develop the wall-of-synth shoegazing sound to create a fresh, new direction for Ladytron. The production is menacing and urgent, and the vocal transcendence of songs like International Dateline has been replaced by more encompassing instrumentation; I love this style, but others may yearn for the crisper sound. Simple, innocent, childlike melodies fight impending doom in the excellent Paper Highways and Horrorscope, Run signals the halfway point before experimental behemoths like Deadzone and You've Changed merge with ethereal powerhouses Figurine and The Mountain to create one of the strongest back halves of an album in recent years. Closer Tomorrow is Another Day is beautiful. I adore this album. Welcome back Ladytron - and thank you for taking risks and expanding your sound. Full Review »
  3. Feb 16, 2019
    2
    Ladytron's new "Ladytron" album is a big disappointment for me; let's just be upfront about this. It has none of the infectious melodies andLadytron's new "Ladytron" album is a big disappointment for me; let's just be upfront about this. It has none of the infectious melodies and hits of past albums. There are no hits here, nothing memorable. It's as big a disappointment as Metric's most recent "Pagans in Vegas" effort. I don't know what's happened to adult music in the past ten years but I have scarce new music of interest, most is from 8 to 12 years ago. "Ladytron" exudes an overall attitude of militant messaging rather than being musically pleasing. Another big problem is that the album wasn't mixed well, their vocals are largely overrun by driving electronica and EDM. As such, I can't even use the album as background music for misc activities. For me, this is a wasted effort and a terribly wasted opportunity. I hate thinking I've got to wait another X years for Ladytron to issue another release, arghhh!
    Track by track notes:
    Until the Fire is 5 mins of whispery vocal repetitivity mostly drowned out by the accompaniment,
    The Island's sound "borrows" heavily from one of St Etienne's songs, hmm,
    Tower of Glass introduces bagpipes which is its only distinguishing element,
    Far from Home meh,
    Paper Highways was mostly monotone, trance EDM,
    The Animals, more trance electronica,
    Run is another song of repetitive EDM nonsense,
    Deadzone, whatever vocal performance was attempting to come out was again drowned out by accompanying electronica,
    Figurine starts off well but halfway through gets drowned out by electronica once again, ugh,
    You've Changed, more of the same, vocals overrun by driving EDM,
    Horrorscope comes off as political chant EDM,
    The Mountain is not all that unpleasant actually, utilizing a more traditional beat vice EDM, but they continue the chant style which is not flattering,
    Tomorrow is Another Day is the least aurically offensive track for me. It's almost listenable, but they persist yet in their chant/trance style which is just so terribly bland and does nothing to show the beautiful lyric range we all love them for.
    Full Review »