"The best album to bear the NMA imprint since 1989's classic 'Thunder and Consolation.'"
8/10 ( Classic Rock)
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New Model Army
Between Dog and Wolf
Crusty alt.rock stalwarts bare their canines.
Four yeas on from the unexpectedly metallic hues of 2009's "Today is a Good Day", Justin Sullivan's indestructible crew are on typically combative form on their twelfth studio album. In contrast to its predecessor's strident gait, "Between Dog and Wolf" is an album of dark shadows, ominous uncertainties and wildly dynamic ambushes. Songs like the rumbling, weather-beaten opener "Horsemen", the distinctly creepy "I Need More Time" and the haunting, grandiose "Quasr El Nil Bridge" have been built around persistent rhythmic pulses and a dash of ambient menace, bringing Sullivan's usual role of malevolent narrator into the foreground and making his tales of chaos, fear, societal confusion and the runaway haste of mortality's ticking clock more evocative and compelling than at any time since his band's late 80s commercial heyday. In fact, thanks to the sublime crescendos and soaring choruses of "Seven Times", "Pull the Sun" and the simply stunning "Storm Clouds", it is more than apparent that this is the best album to bear the NMA imprint since 1989's "Thunder and Consolation."
Eight out of ten.
(c) Classic Rock magazine...etc