The sound of the album is as important as the notes Bird plays, and this extends to the lyrics, where he’s gradually gone from word-play to syllable-play, often choosing lines for their sounds and tonal quality more than for their meaning. Nevertheless, Bird’s music is still emotionally powerful– he gives uncommon weight to odd phrases, sometimes backing off pronouncing a word fully. His diction comes and goes similar to the way Thom Yorke’s does. Some of the phrases don’t mean anything; others jump out oddly, like the way he follows a free-association game on “Masterswarm” with the startlingly cogent, even harrowing line, “They took me to the hospital and they put me through a scan.” Bird injects the music with similar contrasts, opening “Effigy” with a spooky bed of looping, processed violins before shifting into one of the album’s most traditional-sounding moments, with finger-picked acoustic guitar playing a simple, straightforward melody.
-Joe Tangari Pitchfork 7.5/10
Noble Beast by Andrew Bird