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The Strokes: Angles

Angles is hardly their best effort -- well any album the band releases won't be able to hold a candle to 2001's Is This It -- yet many critics claim that 2006's First Impressions of Earth is their worst. I might catch some shit for this, but I find Angles...
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Angles is hardly their best effort -- well any album the band releases won't be able to hold a candle to 2001's Is This It -- yet many critics claim that 2006's First Impressions of Earth is their worst. I might catch some shit for this, but I find Angles to be The Strokes' worst album. Five years between albums and Angles is what they give us? Perhaps I'm missing something bigger, perhaps I'm far too jaded, but I find Angles to be underwhelming and forgettable.

What the critics are saying:

A.V. Club: Stripped to the barest essentials--droning vocals, springy guitars, simple rhythms, and unbeatable hooks--Angles is far from being the sort of grandly ambitious statement that's expected after several years of deliberation.

Rolling Stone: "There's no one I disapprove of/Or root for more than myself," [Casablancas] declares in "Life Is Simple in the Moonlight." That bravado, cut with doubt, sums up his band's greatness and dilemma. The Strokes invented their own rock. They also want to be better. And that takes time.

The Guardian: But too many unmemorable songs here struggle to define themselves, much less redefine the Strokes...But "Under Cover of Darkness" - a pastiche of the Strokes's old sound, delivered with wry amusement - proves that they just cannot continue as they were.

Pitchfork: Throughout, the album is hobbled by disconnections-- between verse and chorus, lyrics and music, intent and execution. Casablancas' ambivalence about his own actions crops up often.

Angles is out now via RCA.

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