Albums to watch

Amo

Bring Me The Horizon

Amo

Sixth album of alt-rock/metal from the Sheffield-based five-piece

ADM rating[?]

6.9

Label
RCA
UK Release date
25/01/2019
US Release date
25/01/2019
  1. 10.0 |   NME

    15 years into their career and light years from their deathcore beginnings, Bring Me The Horizon have embarked on an odyssey of diversity in sound, proof that they can do what they want and get away with it
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  2. 8.0 |   The Music

    This album deserves to be given the time to let the changes sink in. This new direction is not the end of the world. It's a new world altogether, and it’s looking pretty sweet
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  3. 8.0 |   Evening Standard

    Yet for all their dip into glitchy electronics, the spirit of rock endures on rampaging choruses such as Mantra and Wonderful Life
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  4. 8.0 |   The Independent

    Amo won’t satisfy all of BMTH’s fans, but it’s certainly accomplished, catchy and eclectic enough to bring in some new ones
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  5. 8.0 |   The Skinny

    Their most ambitious project to date
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  6. 8.0 |   The Digital Fix

    Those pop hooks that were bubbling under the surface have now run amok, and the rock roots are harder to find
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  7. 7.5 |   Consequence Of Sound

    BMTH have made a full transition into a genre-defying sound that embraces elements of pop, rock, dance, and electronic music — a far cry from the deathcore aggression of their 2006 debut, Count Your Blessings
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  8. 7.0 |   Exclaim

    It feels like BMTH weren't ready to fully commit to either sound and, as a result, we're left with a mixed bag of tracks that offers a little something for everyone but never quite enough
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  9. 7.0 |   No Ripcord

    A strident record, difficult to categorize and, in a good way, uniquely spliced and sequenced with little fear of crossing boundaries
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  10. 6.0 |   The Guardian

    The blend of rock, balladry and electronics is a long way from BMtH’s deathcore origins. Slightly mirroring Linkin Park’s electronic remap with A Thousand Suns, there are quiet piano parts, bleeping synthesisers, electro raps and even what sounds like a children’s choir
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  11. 5.0 |   Clash

    Much like last year’s ‘Simulation Theory’ from fellow rock titans Muse, this album captures an occasionally combustible but largely uncomfortable sound of a previously fearless and pioneering band caught in a crisis of confidence
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  12. 2.0 |   Sputnik Music (staff)

    This is shit. Simply shit
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