The Guardian: The third album from Wye Oak boasts many of the same dream-pop textures deployed by fellow Baltimore boy/girl duo Beach House, but theirs is a more varied sound, with greater use of light and shade.
Spin: Singer-guitarist Jenn Wasner's voice and lyrics -- smoky, seductive, strange -- are perfectly framed by everything from chugging shoegaze ("Holy Holy") to subdued thrum ("Fish") to virtually nothing (the gutting closer "Doubt").
Sputnik Music: While the chilled warmth of the loneliness is the essence and the soul of Civilian, It's when everything falls apart where the album reaches its great heights. When "Dog Eyes" lucid atmosphere is split open by a shockingly violent guitar solo, it's an awesome sight to behold.
Drowned In Sound: True, it can sometimes seem as if Wye Oak's sole ambition is to sound like a lot of other bands but - just as they claim the album title comes from their belief that 'everybody wants to be normal but no-one truly is' - Civilian has just enough personality to stop it being completely pedestrian.
Civilian is out now via Merge.