Broken Social SceneBest Broken Social Scene Albums Ranked
8.3
Avg Score
20
Opinions
11
Albums
8
Reviewers
Summary from 20 ratings
On Wavelength, fans have rated Broken Social Scene's catalog across 11 albums from 20 opinions, with an overall average of 8.3/10. The top-rated Broken Social Scene album is You Forgot It In People (2002) with a 9.2/10 average from 5 ratings, followed by Broken Social Scene and Hug of Thunder. The discography on Wavelength spans 2001 to 2022. Cause = Time ranks as the highest-rated Broken Social Scene song on Wavelength with a 9.1/10 average.
You Forgot It In People
“It's a bit late to be talking about New Year's Resolutions, but mine was to dig through the boxes upon boxes of promos that arrive at the Pitchfork mailbox each month, and listen intently to hundreds of them in one sitting, in an attempt to discover those rare, impossibly great bands that would otherwise slip through the cracks. It's been an absolute bitch so far, and awfully disheartening, but I'”
Hug of Thunder
“Broken Social Scene return with a wild, triumphant embrace”
Hug of Thunder
“On their first album in seven years, Broken Social Scene distill their sound to a vital essence. The band is focused and renewed, invigorated by the missionary spirit of their best work.”
Broken Social Scene
“Expectations are a bitch. Ask J.D. Salinger. Or George Lucas. Or Kevin Shields. After Broken Social Scene stumbled out of the incestuous Toronto alt-rock scene with *Feel Good Lost*-- a postrumental refrigerator-hum stiff of a debut-- few would have guessed this group of scruffed-up bohos had a veritable classic lurking in their collective consciousness. Then, ignited by a rabid internet reception”
Forgiveness Rock Record
“With production assistance from John McEntire, the Canadian indie rock kingpins return, tighter and more polished than ever.”
Feel Good Lost
“Certain records are just made for close listening on headphones. Some albums cannot be fully experienced save a complete discontinuation of the outside world. The inner retreat of headphone listening sheds light on a group's true colors; the makeup rubs off, and leaves us to discover all the flaws and inconsistencies in the music's resplendent left/right asymmetry. What on speakers sounds like an ”
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