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Florence + the Machine

Florence + the MachineBest Florence + the Machine Albums Ranked

8.1

Avg Score

39

Opinions

14

Albums

17

Reviewers

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Summary from 39 ratings

On Wavelength, fans have rated Florence + the Machine's catalog across 14 albums from 39 opinions, with an overall average of 8.1/10. The top-rated Florence + the Machine album is Dance Fever (2022) with a 8.1/10 average from 8 ratings, followed by Everybody Scream and How Big, How Blue, How Beautiful. The discography on Wavelength spans 2009 to 2025. How Big, How Blue, How Beautiful ranks as the highest-rated Florence + the Machine song on Wavelength with a 10.0/10 average.

Everybody Scream

Everybody Scream

nme
10

“It’s your troubled hero / Back for season six”, Florence Welch sings on ‘The Old Religion’ – a note of irony ringing through her distinctly sirenic voice. Yet rather than a tale of her singular torment, her sixth album as Florence + The Machine – the aptly-titled ‘Everybody Scream’ – mostly operates as a collective exorcism of the horrors and hopes inherent to womanhood. Weeks ahead of the album

Dance Fever

Dance Fever

consequence
9.1

An explosive expression of unity in the face of strife and an exuberant expression of hope. ... But beneath the pomp and circumstance, Welch is traditionally known for, Dance Fever is a deeper look at a woman who unapologetically bares it all.

Dance Fever

Dance Fever

thelineofbestfit
9.0

Florence + the Machine shake up the formula on the joyous and personal Dance Fever

High As Hope

High As Hope

pastemagazine
8.3

A mix of raw-nerved personal reckoning and outward-looking, life-affirming anthems, Florence and the Machine’s follow-up to the chart-topping How Big, How Blue, How Beautiful soars just as high. A new level of vulnerability from Florence Welch and deft, atmospheric production from Emile Haynie (Lana Del Rey) makes High As Hope another album of cathedral-filling, mountain-moving sound, with Welch’s

Everybody Scream

Everybody Scream

rollingstone
8.0

Florence + the Machine’s sixth album Everybody Scream turns a painful experience into an artistic triumph

Everybody Scream

Everybody Scream

rollingstone
8.0

Florence + the Machine’s sixth album Everybody Scream turns a painful experience into an artistic triumph

Lungs

Lungs

Ryan1Nunez
7.8

This is the album that made me a fan of Florence + The Machine. Lungs feels raw, theatrical, and completely alive. It’s like it’s bursting at the seams with emotion and strange, beautiful energy. Florence Welch’s voice is the centerpiece, soaring and unfiltered, turning every song into something almost spiritual. What hooked me instantly was how fearless it sounds. The harp-driven production, the indie rock grit, and the baroque pop influences all collide in a way that shouldn’t work, but absolutely does. Songs like “Dog Days Are Over” and “Cosmic Love” don’t just stick with you, they pull you in. It’s not perfect because sometimes it leans a bit chaotic, but that’s part of its charm. Lungs isn’t just a debut, it’s an experience, and for me, it was the start of being fully locked into their world.

Everybody Scream

Everybody Scream

Ryan1Nunez
8.3

Everybody Screams is Florence + The Machine at their most intimate and theatrical. The chamber arrangements strip the songs down to their emotional bones, letting Florence’s voice feel haunting, human, and incredibly powerful. The strings, piano, and softer production choices turn familiar tracks into new emotional experiences—you can practically feel the breath between every note. Not every reimagined moment hits with the same intensity, but the album as a whole feels bold and beautifully curated. It’s a reminder of Florence’s unmatched ability to blend raw vulnerability with soaring drama. A stirring, elegant rework that proves her music thrives in any form.

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