![]() ![]() ^ "Protomartyr - Chart history | Billboard".^ " Magazine - Sub-Ed's Top 100 Albums Of The Decade".^ "I migliori ALBUM degli Anni Dieci"."Best albums of 2015: Kendrick Lamar, Courtney Barnett and more". ^ "Protomartyr - "Forbidden" (Preoccupations Cover)".^ "David Bazan – "The Devil In His Youth" (Protomartyr Cover)"."2015 Artist Survey: A Place to Bury Strangers". "The 25 Most 'Detroit' Songs Ever Recorded". "Protomartyr: The Agent Intellect Review". "Review: Protomartyr See Life Through to Its Lack of Conclusion on 'The Agent Intellect' ". ^ Unterberger, Andrew (October 6, 2015)."Protomartyr: The Agent Intellect review – epic, dirgy portrait of gravelly malaise". ^ a b Hutchinson, Kate (October 1, 2015)."Protomartyr finds hope amid rubble in 'The Agent Intellect' ". "Protomartyr's winning streak continues on its second album in two years". ^ a b "Reviews for The Agent Intellect by Protomartyr".^ "The Agent Intellect by Protomartyr reviews".^ "The Agent Intellect, by Protomartyr".^ "Review: Protomartyr, 'The Agent Intellect' ".^ "Protomartyr shares new song "I Forgive You" - listen". ![]() ^ "Protomartyr unveils new song "Dope Cloud" - listen".^ "Protomartyr Announce 'The Agent Intellect' LP With Shuddering 'Why Does It Shake?' ".^ "Q&A: Protomartyr On Their New Album The Agent Intellect + "Why Does It Shake?" ".Preoccupations covered the track "Pontiac 87" as the b-side of a split single with Protomartyr in 2018. Oliver Ackermann of A Place to Bury Strangers included The Agent Intellect among his favorite albums of the year, calling it a "ucking wicked record." In 2017, David Bazan of Pedro The Lion-fame covered "The Devil in His Youth" for the anti- Trump compilation Our First 100 Days. Thrillist included it on their list "The 25 Most 'Detroit' Songs Ever Recorded". Accolades & covers īoth Pitchfork and Pretty Much Amazing ranked the track "Dope Cloud" the 98th and 89th best track of 2015 respectively. In a review for Rolling Stone, Zach Kelly thought that: this LP feels like a testament to perseverance, with world-weary humor and introspection providing flashes of clarity". AllMusic thought that: "Protomartyr's music is smart without wearing its intellect on its sleeve, and physically strong enough to support the ideas lurking behind Casey's lyrics, and The Agent Intellect is an album that challenges both the mind and the body if you're looking for further confirmation that Protomartyr are one of the smartest and toughest bands of their day, this album is what you need.". Club thought that: "The Agent Intellect is an impressive addition to the band’s small discography, and it hints that bigger, bolder work may lay ahead.". As poignant as those images of a decrepit Motor City, once brilliant, now decayed." Sam Lefebvre of Paste magazine described the album as "an album of spindly bass, needling guitar and economical drums." Lefebvre further added "And yet, with Protomartyr’s inventive ensemble flare, it sounds like much more." The Guardian critic Kate Hutchinson thought: "This isn’t spiky postpunk like their last album – it’s more unhinged: they’ve swapped hooks for a dirgy epicness, distortion bulldozes through, sometimes flaring angrily, punctured by driving, truly affecting drums. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, the album received an average score of 85, which indicates "Universal acclaim", based on 20 reviews. The Agent Intellect was met with positive reviews from contemporary reviewers. Release Professional ratings Aggregate scores
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