
A warm, sepia-toned stillness settles over these ten tracks, trading the neon-lit anxiety of the past for a surprisingly tender, acoustic-driven maturity. The duo embraces a soft-rock intimacy that feels like a long, exhaled breath, anchoring their signature eccentricity in 1970s baroque pop and 1990s alternative radio textures rather than the dancefloor.
Also reviewed byAllMusic
How does Loss of Life sound next to the rest of MGMT's catalogue?
This album stays in step with the catalogue across the board — no axis departs enough to be worth its own note. Hover the dots to see where each one sits.
Cassette uses generative AI to enrich its catalog. How we use AI →