Music / rock

Everyone's crushed


Reviews (6)


PopMatters

d. 1. June 2023

By

By

Christopher J. Lee

d. 1. June 2023

"Tears of joy? Tears of pain? Tears from laughter? Water From Your Eyes is all of the above. Unlike a number of recent New York acts that have relied on looks and attitude (think: Sleigh Bells), Brown and Amos have intelligence to burn. Everyone's Crushed soundtracks our present frenzied moment in new ways, portending a mutual future neither bright nor grim but, like this band, is inescapably singular".


Pitchfork

d. 30. May 2023

By

By

Cat Zhang

d. 30. May 2023

"Best New Music" - "The Brooklyn duo's logic-defying new album threads anticapitalist critique, stoner humor, and a hazy undercurrent of fatalism into art-pop so mesmerizing it'll give you a contact high".


The guardian

d. 25. May 2023

By

By

Alexis Petridis

d. 25. May 2023

"... Everyone's Crushed is the only recent album that sounds the way it does. It has taken Water From Your Eyes six years to reach a point where their music feels genuinely original, a journey that feels worth it. There's a lesson in there".


The guardian

d. 25. May 2023

By

By

Alexis Petridis

d. 25. May 2023

"... Everyone's Crushed is the only recent album that sounds the way it does. It has taken Water From Your Eyes six years to reach a point where their music feels genuinely original, a journey that feels worth it. There's a lesson in there".


PopMatters

d. 1. June 2023

By

By

Christopher J. Lee

d. 1. June 2023

"Tears of joy? Tears of pain? Tears from laughter? Water From Your Eyes is all of the above. Unlike a number of recent New York acts that have relied on looks and attitude (think: Sleigh Bells), Brown and Amos have intelligence to burn. Everyone's Crushed soundtracks our present frenzied moment in new ways, portending a mutual future neither bright nor grim but, like this band, is inescapably singular".


Pitchfork

d. 30. May 2023

By

By

Cat Zhang

d. 30. May 2023

"Best New Music" - "The Brooklyn duo's logic-defying new album threads anticapitalist critique, stoner humor, and a hazy undercurrent of fatalism into art-pop so mesmerizing it'll give you a contact high".