Wonderful Wonderful

AlbumSep 22 / 201710 songs, 43m 6s
New Wave Pop Rock
Popular
195

6.3 / 10

With the Killers, greatness and ridiculousness go hand in hand. Their fifth album contains only a little of both.

F

In a recent Rolling Stone interview, The Killers make the case for their first new album in five years, offering a series of quotes that could have hailed directly from a press release: “The best way to put it is that I wanted to inhabit my age, so it’s a snapshot—a true representation of where we’re at,” says singer…

6 / 10

On 'Wonderful Wonderful' band leader Brandon Flowers bares himself more than ever before. Read NME's review.

8 / 10

Wonderful Wonderful is The Killers' latest step in becoming the most concise version of themselves.

7.3 / 10

Each album is as good as the last and those that came after it. To that end, Wonderful Wonderful works as a perfect…

Our take on the fifth album from the nostalgia-loving Vegas rockers.

Still quintessentially The Killers.

Plus Death From Above – Outrage! Is Now, and Sløtface – Try Not To Freak Out

In 2017, it's hard to figure out where Brandon Flowers ends and the Killers begin.

7 / 10

"Have All the Songs Been Written" caps off the Killers' latest album, Wonderful Wonderful, and fans could be forgiven if they'd thought that...

For a band clearly in flux 'Wonderful Wonderful' is a staggering achievement of cohesion and inspiration‘Wonderful!

3.0 / 10

The Killers are the kind of band that will likely always have a following.

5 / 10

You can already picture the stirring title track from The Killers’ fifth record being used as a melodramatic opener for their upcoming arena tour.

(Virgin EMI)

Wonderful Wonderful’s best tracks happen to be the ones that feel the most tossed off by the Killers.

6 / 10

Photo: Erik.

80 %

Some of the Killers' best music to date.

Album Reviews: The Killers - Wonderful Wonderful

2.0 / 5

The Killers - Wonderful Wonderful review: How did it end up like this?

The Vegas quartet's fifth album - is it destined to be their last? CD New Music review by Russ Coffey