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LP3
by Ratatat

Ratatat reviews
Critic Score
Metascore: 71 Metascore out of 100
User Score  
7.8 out of 10
based on 22 reviews
Read critic reviews
How did we calculate this?
based on 10 votes
Read user comments
Rate this album

This is the third album for the Brooklyn, New York duo.

LABEL: Beggars Xl
RELEASE DATE: 08 July 2008
DISCS: 1 disc
GENRE(S): Rock, Indie, Electronic

What The Critics Said

All critic scores are converted to a 100-point scale. If a critic does not indicate a score, we assign a score based on the general impression given by the text of the review. Learn more...

100
Entertainment Weekly
While these beats keep you hooked without a single word, surely they'd sound phenomenal with the right vocal on top. [15 Aug 2008, p.67]
Read Full Review
90
Hot Press
Lovely promiscuous electronica.
Read Full Review
88
The Phoenix
The result is some kind of cosmic machine music, reflecting not just a stoner’s world of internalized minimalist headbanging but an entire universe of culture, texture, and possibility.
Read Full Review
85
Prefix Magazine
It is the most realized of their albums to date, and it showcases the group fully exploring the possibilities of the niche that they created for themselves two records ago.
Read Full Review
80
Paste Magazine
Adventurous beat-mining producers like the aforementioned West could very well be using bits of several of these tracks for a Common beat before the year is finished. But even if that doesn't happen, keep this collection close: Someone's definitely going to try to steal your copy.
Read Full Review
80
The New York Times
Like much instrumental rock, Ratatat’s tunes can still sound like a soundtrack in search of a credit sequence. Yet all the new transformations enrich Ratatat’s music both sonically and psychologically, stoking new drama and hinting at hidden reservoirs of melancholy.
Read Full Review
80
All Music Guide
Instead of changing their sound to accommodate a wider palette of sounds, they wisely chose to incorporate them into their aesthetic. It's an inspired move that will help them keep their old fans and still allow the duo to progress musically.
Read Full Review
78
Filter
Unlike its second effort, LP3 offers a sense of adventure through some potent modes of de-familiarization. [Summer 2008, p.92]
72
Pitchfork
There's nothing intrinsically flawed about what's otherwise a solid instrumental record, but so much of it feels so close to many of the things happening on the radio and the pop charts right now that, 90 seconds into a song, the mind might start wandering and wondering what this kind of stuff would sound like with Wale or Rihanna on top of it.
Read Full Review
70
Village Voice
LP3 is a stronger outing, though it's not necessarily harder or faster.
Read Full Review
70
Boston Globe
At this point in their career, Mast and Stroud's brand of whip-smart laptop rock secures them a spot on any dance party playlist. Alas, some songs here sound more fit for a party's background music than music for people to actually dance to.
Read Full Review
70
Spin
LP3 is as wildly organic as instrumental electronica gets without becoming another genre (or five) altogether.
Read Full Review
70
Blender
It occasionally feels slack, especially compared to old faves like “Wildcat” or their bootleg hip-hop remixes.
Read Full Review
70
Drowned In Sound
LP3 will keep a handful of indie-rockers happy but may not satisfy listeners looking for Daft Punk danceability.
Read Full Review
68
Lost At Sea
As presented on LP3, it appears Ratatat's music works best as a fleeting burst rather than a long player.
Read Full Review
60
Q Magazine
The disco squelch and vocoder melodies of Falcon Jab recall Discovery-era Daft Punk, but what gives this an extra dimension and warmth is Stroud's guitar playing. [Aug 2008, p.140]
60
musicOMH.com
The balancing act that any group has to perform in successive albums remains askew here. In trying to bring outside influences into their specific sound, Ratatat have gained an appreciation for novel sounds, even if they don't fit in well.
Read Full Review
60
Tiny Mix Tapes
LP3 is a rewarding listen, and you’ll have a taste for it if you enjoyed the less powerful moments of "Classics" or Evan Mast’s previous textural work as E*Vax. Just don’t expect to find yourself headbanging and air-guitaring alone in your room.
Read Full Review
60
PopMatters
Though glimpses of possibility exist (“Falcon Jab” and “Shempi”), and the album is a more coherent and epic expression than previous works, it still fails to excite and mobilize.
Read Full Review
60
Urb
Their tried and true formula does wear thin in parts, as it always does, but there are enough creative wrinkles in this album to warrant repeat listens and contemplation.
Read Full Review
50
Rolling Stone
LP3 is no doubt meticulously composed, but too much of it just feels like background music.
Read Full Review
40
Uncut
The result is strangely enervating. [Aug 2008, p.103]

What Our Users Said

Vote Now! The average user rating for this album is 7.8 (out of 10) based on 10 User Votes
Note: User votes are NOT included in the Metascore calculation.

Siege gave it an8:
Definitely quality music, but the energy is entriely different than Classics or the first LP. As a whole, the album feels cohesive. Individually, each track is untethered and not exceptional. The highs are much less high and lows, much less low, but overall, listenable, enjoyable and a vereable stepping stone to their magnum opus. Also, not quite as danceable.

Malte S. gave it a7:
Not as good as their previous albums. it lacks the catchy, unique ratatat-melodies and puts too much emphasis on diversity, like "oh, let's try to put 7 more instruments into this song". still, "mirando" alone makes up for a lot. Freaking amazing.

Kurt W. gave it a9:
Definitely different from their previous works, but in a good, progressive way. much more diverse than their previous two efforts. there are songs on here that are as good as anything i've heard from them (falcon jab, mirando, shempi). best album so far in what my opinion has been a very weak year.

Casey E. gave it a9:
Some completely different techniques, but the same old, awesome Ratatat.

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