The Fiery Furnaces - Widow City

Reviews of Widow City

Rating Summary
n/a by www.stylusmagazine.com An astonishing act of rejuvenation and reclamation, the album may just be the group’s best to date, and solidly reestablishes Eleanor and Matthew as progenitors of brilliantly exciting, mind-scrambling pop. Read more
n/a by www.musicomh.com For a 21st century rock band, there isn't a single moment here that threatens to turn into an 'anthem' to be balled out at the Nestle-Monsanto Rock Festival at a mud-pit near you next summer. Read more
n/a by www.courant.com No one does puzzle-pop quite like the Fiery Furnaces, and despite the multi-genre pileups and lofty literary pretension, when they get it right it's enough to forgive them for when they get it wrong. Read more
n/a by www.tinymixtapes.com Widow City is by far the band’s toughest-as-nails record yet, with Matthew incessantly setting fire to the stage. Read more
n/a by www.amazon.com This record's delightful and wholly original; no one else could possibly have made it. Read more
n/a by nymag.com It’s their most accessible and coherent to date. Read more
n/a by www.avclub.com The Fiery Furnaces earn repeated listens on hooks and convoluted storytelling alone, though 2003's "Gallowsbird's Bark and Bitter Tea" hold more surprises. Read more
n/a by Pitchfork Media It all sounds cleaner and more accessible than anything they've done in the past, but that might actually be part of the problem. Read more
n/a by https: Widow City covers so much territory so quickly that it can actually give you jetlag, and its geographical diversity is mirrored by its hallucinatory, irreconcilable lyrics. Read more
n/a by www.blender.com It’s a fantastically difficult record, but almost every passage of knotty head-game weirdness quickly dovetails into something dramatic and physical, and it all sparkles with crushed particles of the blues. Read more
n/a by www.prefixmag.com Widow City is a fascinating album. Unfortunately, sometimes it's more fascinating than it is listenable. Read more
n/a by www.boston.com This dauntingly difficult-to-sit-through disc of scattershot rhythms, quickly discarded melodies, and opaque ideas seems as much a contrarian dare to its audience as anything else. That's either good or bad news, depending on whether you find Eleanor and Matthew Friedberger's schizophrenic approach irritating or intriguing, grating or great - or maybe both. Read more
n/a by www.hotpress.com Widow City is wordy, nerdy, and throws in everything but the hurdy-gurdy. Read more
n/a by www.cokemachineglow.com The libretto/story/concept of the album is of absolutely no interest to me, and it won't be to you either. Read more
n/a by Rolling Stone Factor in the music’s kitchen-sink vibe--anchored by a Chamberlin keyboard that triggers tape loops of various instruments--and the album is a lot to take in. But the task can be rewarding. Read more
n/a by Popmatters Since the band plays it so safe on this record, it makes the stories they are telling sound emotionless. Read more
n/a by www.uncut.co.uk By now the patience of even their most ardent fans must be wearing thin Read more
n/a by thephoenix.com There’s plenty in the way of ambition on Widow City, but little substance to back it up. Read more
n/a by www.austinchronicle.com The remainder of the 16-song, hourlong question mark is emphatic spoken word hurled over a sound check--pretentious, superfluous, and ultimately unlistenable. Read more