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Omni

OmniBest Omni Albums Ranked

7.3

Avg Score

12

Opinions

5

Albums

6

Reviewers

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About

Summary from 12 ratings

On Wavelength, fans have rated Omni's catalog across 5 albums from 12 opinions, with an overall average of 7.3/10. The top-rated Omni album is Souvenir (2024) with a 7.9/10 average from 3 ratings, followed by Deluxe and Networker. The discography on Wavelength spans 2016 to 2024.

Souvenir

Souvenir

loudandquiet
8.0

Cue an almighty sigh of relief: after nearly five Omni-less years, Frankie Broyles and Philip Frobos are back with drummer Chris Yonker for the release of their fourth album, Souvenir. The trademark choppy, mathematical precision that oozes so much effortless cool across their past three albums is immediately recognisable and as irresistible as always. For a band that has thrived on a glistening i

Deluxe

Deluxe

loudandquiet
8.0

Negating the blues-rooted, formulaic progressions of trad-rock in a way that’s refreshingly playful, Atlanta-based Omni take all of the best aspects of late-70s/early-80s outsider pop and blend it with a melodic impulse that makes this debut LP prevail. It’s all too easy to accuse them of being derivative – the spidery, stop-start arrangements recall the likes of Pylon and Television at their most

Souvenir

Souvenir

pastemagazine
7.5

Five years after their previous release, the Atlanta band returns with another set of quick, to-the-point and kinetic post-punk.

Multi-Task

Multi-Task

thelineofbestfit
7.5

Omni’s Multi-task is an urgent and anxious return for the Atlanta trio

Multi-Task

Multi-Task

pitchfork
7.2

The wiry Atlanta, Ga. rock trio Omni sells its nervous energy as a logical way of dealing with the world. Where other bands might smooth things out, Omni finds angles and sharp turns.

Networker

Networker

loudandquiet
7.0

Following the release of their second album, Multi-Task, in 2017, we left Omni taking their stand as members of that post-punk, art-rock upswing that circled around bands like Ought, Preoccupations and Protomartyr, all of which seemed to be continuing the work of giants like Wire, The Fall and early Talking Heads. Networker is the Atlanta trio’s first record for Sub Pop, and is without a doubt a b

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