100 Lovers Explained

100 Lovers
Type:studio
Artist:DeVotchKa
Cover:100 Lovers (DeVotchKa album - cover art).jpg
Studio:Wavelab Studio, Tucson, Arizona
NFA, Denver, Colorado
Genre:Indie folk, Gypsy punk
Length:44:38
Label:Anti-
Producer:
  • Craig Schumacher
  • DeVotchKa
Prev Title:I Love You, Philip Morris
Prev Year:2009
Next Title:This Night Falls Forever
Next Year:2018

100 Lovers is the sixth studio album by American indie folk band DeVotchKa. It was released by Anti- Records on February 28, 2011.

Release

The first music video "100 Other Lovers" was released on February 3, 2011, and directed by Chloe Rodham.

Devotchka released the music video to "All the Sand in All the Sea" on their official YouTube on February 15, 2011.

Critical reception

100 Lovers was met with "generally favorable" reviews from critics. At Metacritic, which assigns a weighted average rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream publications, this release received an average score of 72 based on 18 reviews. At AnyDecentMusic?, the album was given a 6.4 out of 10 based on a critical consensus 17 reviews.

The AllMusic review by James Christopher Monger awarded the album 3.5 stars stating "It's a melting pot to be sure, and the band has a tendency to go heavy on the atmosphere and light on the hooks, but there’s never any doubt that it’s a brew tended over by some awfully talented cooks." At Pitchfork, David Bevan wrote: "100 Lovers, with its interludes, clever sequencing, and the appropriately titled instrumental "Sunshine", feels less like a grouping of songs as it does an entirely different animal altogether." Melanie Haupt of The Austin Chronicle gave a four out of five stars, describing the instrumentation on the album "more lushly realized than ever." At Los Angeles Times, writer Randy Lewis explained: "DeVotchKa creates music that explodes with the desperate passion of someone standing at the end of a pier, or lost in the middle of a desert."

In a review for Paste, critic reviewer Steve LaBate wrote: "DeVotchKa's fifth studio LP, 100 Lovers, begins with a gorgeously moody and cinematic wash of synths, strings and piano seeping forth as if water through a crack in a dam. From beneath this swirl of sound, a steady-marching drumbeat subtly emerges, pressure building slowly at first but then more and more rapidly until, finally, the wall holding back the floodwaters bursts in a majestic symphonic crescendo."

Personnel