Albums to watch

Congratulations

MGMT

Congratulations

The Brooklyn duo follow up the hugely successful Oracular Spectacular with an adventurous no-singles album produced by Spacemen 3 psychedelic specialist Sonic Boom

ADM rating[?]

6.5

Label
Columbia
UK Release date
12/04/2010
  1. 10.0 |   Mojo

    A reaction to instant fame in both content and sound, a reinvention so fully realised it could almost be the work of another band. Print edition only

  2. 8.5 |   The Line Of Best Fit

    I would encourage anyone interested in MGMT’s Congratulations to be patient. Like most great albums it’s hard to get on a first listen
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  3. 8.0 |   Under The Radar

    A fine record, which, while distantly removed stylistically from their first, doesn't lose grasp of their innate pop instincts, channeling them in a more elliptical, silvery manner. This new context may be initially off-putting, but ultimately the payoff's that much greater
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  4. 8.0 |   Bowlegs

    With Congratulations, MGMT proves they're more than just a one act show
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  5. 8.0 |   The Scotsman

    Hopefully one day it will be viewed as part of a rich back catalogue, although congratulations really will be in order if it comes to be seen as a classic. Which it just might
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  6. 8.0 |   The Sunday Times

    Commercially, who knows which way this one will go — but musically, it’s a triumph
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  7. 8.0 |   Bowlegs

    MGMT fans have a choice here. Get bored quickly or give something a little more onion-skinned a chance
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  8. 8.0 |   FasterLouder

    MGMT have shed their skin and grown up in front of our ears
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  9. 8.0 |   Spin

    Despite being haunted by the group's flip from rock-star charade to reality, Congratulations still brims with mischievous energy. And for a series of druggy Dada setpieces, it feels uncommonly, emotionally honest
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  10. 8.0 |   Q

    As a left-field response to the vertigo of sudden success, Congratulations has both integrity and charm. Print edition only

  11. 8.0 |   Uncut

    This is a wilful and lovably eccentric second album from a band who've had a sniff of being pop stars and decided they'd rather be weird and esoteric
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  12. 8.0 |   The List

    Congratulations may not be quite as instantly loveable as MGMT’s debut, but it’s still a brave and diverse album of impressive ambition
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  13. 8.0 |   Eye Weekly

    Congratulations is relentlessly inventive, totally catchy and mercifully free of irony. Career suicide has never sounded so pop
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  14. 8.0 |   The Irish Times

    There is a quiet, majestic beauty to this album if you give it the time. It’s surprising for all the right reasons
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  15. 7.0 |   The Digital Fix

    Catastrophic miscalculations apart, there’s no doubt that MGMT are heading in the right direction
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  16. 7.0 |   The Fly

    There’s definitely no ‘Kids’ here, no ‘Time To Pretend’ or ‘Electric Feel’. Instead, what we have is a labyrinth of unintentionally hilarious flute solos
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  17. 7.0 |   Drowned In Sound

    Old fans will have confirmation that this isn’t an end to hooks, melody or stand alone songs; ‘Kids’-haters will find a genuinely engrossing psyche pop outing, minimal in Club NME fodder, only intermittently clunky
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  18. 7.0 |   God Is In The TV

    Given a bit of patience, Congratulations might just be due some plaudits come the end of this year
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  19. 6.8 |   Pitchfork

    Whether they write club-friendly songs like "Kids" or tracks like "Congratulations" or "Flash Delirium" or "It's Working", they can write songs. Hopefully, next time they won't try to jam two dozen of them onto a nine-track album
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  20. 6.3 |   Beats Per Minute

    Perhaps hardcore fans will be pleased with the band’s unwavering defiance toward creating a record of indie-rock gems. The truth of the matter is that the band has fallen short, likely to leave even the most avid fans somewhat disappointed
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  21. 6.0 |   Rolling Stone

    With Congratulations, they attempt to not just keep it weird — which they've done — but to figure out how they can be in it for the long haul. It's a solid start
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  22. 6.0 |   PopMatters

    The album’s whirlpool psychedelia may seem a logical progression, but its decidedly retro tinge adds a striking counterpart
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  23. 6.0 |   The Observer

    The world-conquering Brooklyn duo have not abandoned pop, as some slyly nagging songs attest
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  24. 6.0 |   The Guardian

    While they may have lost some marbles, the Brooklyn duo haven't entirely forgotten how to write a killer tune
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  25. 6.0 |   Evening Standard

    As with The Flaming Lips' recent album, Embryonic, it adds up to commercial suicide, but it makes an interesting change from bands desperately clinging to a winning formula
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  26. 6.0 |   Rave Magazine

    In trying to differentiate themselves from Oracular Spectacular, I can’t help but think that MGMT forgot it was the songwriting, not the production, that made that album so memorable
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  27. 6.0 |   Scotland on Sunday

    Producer Pete Kember of Spaceman 3 has possibly nudged them over the edge of the experimental rock precipice, the centrepiece being 12 minutes and more of the epic Siberian Break
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  28. 6.0 |   Sydney Morning Herald

    Congratulations will likely be seen as a firm ''up yours'' by a lot of fans
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  29. 6.0 |   musicOMH

    A brave, sometimes successful, but ultimately flawed attempt to evolve and grow the band's sound. The one crime is a distinct lack of any memorable tunes
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  30. 6.0 |   The Times

    Persevere past the pretentiousness and there’s real songcraft at work, most magnificently in Siberian Breaks, the album’s epic centrepiece
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  31. 6.0 |   Daily Telegraph

    Fans will find plenty to sustain them but Congratulations sounds like a deliberate attempt to shake off casual listeners and avoid the rock stardom their hits have granted them
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  32. 6.0 |   NME

    Print edition only

  33. 5.0 |   Tiny Mix Tapes

    Despite being every bit the sophomore slump MGMT damn near willed it to be, it leaves you just enough reason to stay interested in what they do nex
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  34. 4.0 |   State

    This version of the band – steeped in prog and psychedelics – is the sound of MGMT being true to themselves, even if the result on Congratulations is a meandering blissed-out journey with little to recommend after the last sustain has subsided
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  35. 4.0 |   No Ripcord

    They’ve struck a very awkward middle ground between easy, fun pop music and a more difficult psychedelic sound. It doesn’t ever hit either demographic right
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  36. 4.0 |   The Quietus

    Their unashamed pure pop brilliance has been sacrificed for little gain
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  37. 2.0 |   The Independent

    The back-handed compliment to "Brian Eno" merely prompts the observation that if he had been involved, this wouldn't have been quite as shambolic
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  38. 2.0 |   Independent on Sunday

    So, Ben and Andrew, congratulations indeed. You've made a record only a handful of people are going to enjoy. What do you want? A chocolate watch?
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MGMT: Congratulations

  • Download full album for just £4.99
  • 1. It's Working £0.99
  • 2. Song For Dan Treacy £0.99
  • 3. Someone's Missing £0.99
  • 4. Flash Delirium £0.99
  • 5. I Found A Whistle £0.99
  • 6. Siberian Breaks £0.99
  • 7. Brian Eno £0.99
  • 8. Lady Dada's Nightmare £0.99
  • 9. Congratulations £0.99
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