Wavelength
Wavelength
Rate and discover music with friends
Black Rebel Motorcycle Club

Black Rebel Motorcycle ClubBest Black Rebel Motorcycle Club Albums Ranked

6.1

Avg Score

13

Opinions

6

Albums

6

Reviewers

012345678910
About

Summary from 13 ratings

On Wavelength, fans have rated Black Rebel Motorcycle Club's catalog across 6 albums from 13 opinions, with an overall average of 6.1/10. The top-rated Black Rebel Motorcycle Club album is Howl (2005) with a 7.0/10 average from 2 ratings, followed by Take Them On, On Your Own and Specter At the Feast. The discography on Wavelength spans 2003 to 2018.

Howl

Howl

pitchfork
7.0

One-time JAMC tribute act follows its disappointing second LP with a more Americana-influenced and assured release.

Take Them On, On Your Own

Take Them On, On Your Own

pitchfork
6.9

So, if the three members of the BRMC are any indication, it looks like being in a so-called Black Rebel Motorcycle Club means embracing the vacant, apathetic stare that goes hand-in-hand with just being *cool*, twenty-four hours a day. The problem is, this kind of Creation-catalog-worshipping mod posing can be both distancing and incredibly tiring. Sure, sneering and flipping up the collar on your

Wrong Creatures

Wrong Creatures

thelineofbestfit
6.5

BRMC hold on to just enough of what's right on their eighth studio album

Wrong Creatures

Wrong Creatures

nme
6.0

“Whatever happened to my rock’n’roll?” howled Black Rebel Motorcycle Club on their artfully noisy debut ‘BRMC’ back in 2001. Sung with a snarl and delivered with swagger, it had that perfect balance of sex and danger that helped lay down the blueprint for the garage-rock revival that followed. They were months ahead of The Strokes and Kings Of Leon, proving what could be done with “a sweet sensati

Wrong Creatures

Wrong Creatures

loudandquiet
6.0

Black Rebel Motorcycle Club, at the time of their emergence in 2001, were a cool band – a black-clad outlaw gang snarling in a sea of dry ice. Not many of their contemporaries from the era have made it this far, and that the trio can still sell out venues the size of Brixton Academy is supporting evidence for the ‘rock ‘n’ roll survivors’ tag they’ve inevitably picked up at this stage in their car

Wrong Creatures

Wrong Creatures

pitchfork
5.8

BRMC’s eighth album continues to prop up the rock-historical establishment. It offers more of the same, but at least it’s more of the same in a fairly compelling way.

Wavelength is the Letterboxd for music.

Download the App