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Virgins (Tim Hecker album)

Virgins
Tim Hecker - Virgins.jpg
Studio album by Tim Hecker
Released October 14, 2013
Recorded 2012
Studio Greenhouse Studios
(Reykjavík, Iceland)
Avast! Recording Company
(Seattle, Washington)
EMPAC
(Troy, New York)
Genre
Length 48:46
Label
Tim Hecker chronology
Ravedeath, 1972
(2011)
Virgins
(2013)
Love Streams
(2016)
Singles from Virgins
  1. "Virginal II"
    Released: August 27, 2013
  2. "Black Refraction"
    Released: September 26, 2013
Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
Source Rating
Metacritic 87/100
Review scores
Source Rating
AllMusic 4/5 stars
The A.V. Club A−
Drowned in Sound 8/10
Mojo 4/5 stars
NME 8/10
Pitchfork Media 8.3/10
Q 4/5 stars
Resident Advisor 4/5
Spin 9/10
Uncut 8/10

Virgins is the seventh studio album by Canadian electronic music musician Tim Hecker, released on October 14, 2013 by Kranky and Paper Bag Records. The album features contributions from Kara-Lis Coverdale.

Virgins received widespread critical acclaim upon its release. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, the album has received an average score of 87, based on 26 reviews, indicating "universal acclaim", and becoming Hecker's highest scoring album on the site.

Mike Powell of Pitchfork Media praised the album, stating, "This is music that benefits from being heard loud and/or on headphones in the same way couches are best experienced by actually sitting down in them instead of just brushing your fingers against the upholstery as you leave the room. Like a lot of Ben Frost’s albums (or something like SwansThe Seer), Virgins feels possessed by the idea that no advancements in society or technology will ever shake our primal reactions to fear, wonder, awe and what in a more naïve era used to be called the sublime. And while it’s a fallacy to think that hyperseriousness is the only way to strike people at their core, it’s still inspiring to hear an artist—especially one who started out as mellow as Hecker—double down and make a statement so confrontational. Once haunted, now he’s the one who haunts."

Philip Sherburne of Spin gave the album a favorable review, stating, "Hecker’s abstractions have never been more expressive than they are on Virgins, and his containers have never been more fraught. His main compositional principle might have come from the late philosopher Marshall Berman: All that is solid melts into air. There’s an exhilarating bleakness at the center of Virgins — the hollow at the heart of all things, nibbling inexorably away."


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