Glass and Bones by Makthaverskan

Makthaverskan Glass and Bones

77
ChoruScore
4 reviews
Consensus forming
Apr 3, 2026
Release Date
Welfare Sounds & Records
Label
Consensus forming Broadly positive consensus

Consensus is still forming across 4 professional reviews. Makthaverskan's Glass and Bones greets the listener with an urgent collision of punk roots and newfound maturity, led by the single “Pity Party” which critics say immediately stakes the record's emotional claim. Across professional reviews, the band balances jagged, raucous guitars and moments of stripped-down balladry

Reviews
4 reviews
Last Updated
Apr 8, 2026
Confidence
90%
Scale
0-100 critics
Primary Praise

“Pity Party” is the best song for its immediate, transcendent impact and repeat-inducing intensity.

Primary Criticism

Shared criticism is still limited across the current review sample.

Who It Fits

Best for listeners looking for maturity and genre blending, starting with Pity Party and Black Waters.

Standout Tracks
Pity Party Black Waters Anytime

Full consensus notes

Makthaverskan's Glass and Bones greets the listener with an urgent collision of punk roots and newfound maturity, led by the single “Pity Party” which critics say immediately stakes the record's emotional claim. Across professional reviews, the band balances jagged, raucous guitars and moments of stripped-down balladry to deliver a collection that feels both viscerally angry and quietly melancholic.

The critical consensus, reflected in a 77.25/100 score across 4 professional reviews, emphasizes recurring strengths: the standout tracks “Pity Party” and “Black Waters” for their intensity and melodic heft, plus praise for “Poppy” and “Won't Wait” as highlights of the record's genre-blending ambition. Reviewers consistently note Maja Milner's sweeping vocals as the emotional engine, and they point to moments where new wave and indie pop textures soften the band's more combustible energy. Critics describe the album as an emotional purge that pairs noise with tenderness, and they repeatedly single out the balance between furious, energetic closers and glacial, melancholy centerpieces.

While reviews skew positive, some writers temper enthusiasm by noting that the album returns to familiar territory rather than reinventing the band's signature sound. Still, the professional reviews agree that Glass and Bones is a confident, emotionally daring follow-up that secures its place in Makthaverskan's catalogue and offers several of the best songs on Glass and Bones for both longtime fans and new listeners. Below, the full reviews examine how those tensions between anger, pain, and lyrical tenderness play out across the record.

Critics' Top Tracks

The standout songs that made critics take notice

1

Pity Party

2 mentions

"Effervescent lead single “Pity Party” compresses all of these elements into three and a half minutes of transcendent bliss."
No Ripcord
2

Black Waters

2 mentions

"Black Waters” highlights a darker side to the band, its glacial guitar figures dripping with a melancholy"
No Ripcord
3

Anytime

1 mention

"Black Waters" and "Anytime' -- the band step out of the spotlight almost entirely"
AllMusic
Effervescent lead single “Pity Party” compresses all of these elements into three and a half minutes of transcendent bliss.
N
No Ripcord
about "Pity Party"
Read full review
2 mentions
98% sentiment

Track Ratings

How critics rated each track, relative to this album (0-100). Only tracks that made critics feel something are rated.

View:
1

Pity Party

2 mentions
100
03:36
2

Shatter

2 mentions
17
03:29
3

Glass and Bones

0 mentions
03:17
4

Poppy

2 mentions
17
02:18
5

Black Waters

2 mentions
60
03:24
6

Won't Wait

1 mention
43
03:47
7

Gambo

0 mentions
03:29
8

Anytime

1 mention
57
02:55
9

Louie

1 mention
5
03:09
10

Öken

1 mention
5
03:00

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What Critics Are Saying

Deep insights from 4 critics who reviewed this album

Critic's Take

Makthaverskan's Glass and Bones opens with the transcendent burst of “Pity Party”, a three-and-a-half minute single that ambushes the listener and sets a very high bar. David Coleman writes with keen affection, noting how “Pity Party” has him hitting repeat like a smitten teenager, and he frames “Shatter” and “Poppy” as jangly companions that recall Love Is All covering The House of Love. He points to “Black Waters” as the album's darker, more glacial moment, driven by melancholy and Maja Milner's sweeping vocals. The frenetic closer “Öken” ties the record back to the band's earlier, combustible energy, making these the best tracks on Glass and Bones by virtue of impact, range, and fidelity to their punk ideals.

Key Points

  • “Pity Party” is the best song for its immediate, transcendent impact and repeat-inducing intensity.
  • The album's core strengths are its genre-blending range, emotional melancholy, and fidelity to punk energy.

Themes

maturity genre blending melancholy punk roots

Critic's Take

Makthaverskan return with Glass and Bones, a bracing, roaring record where the best tracks - notably “Pity Party” and “Black Waters” - pair raucous guitars with Maja Milner's unstoppable passion. The reviewer's voice sings the album's highs: singles that hit like blasts and quieter moments that let Milner take center stage. Songs like “Shatter” and “Poppy” are praised for hooks and lasting joy, while “Won't Wait” is singled out for dramatic dynamics. Overall the record is portrayed as an emotional purge, equal parts noise and tenderness that makes these the best songs on Glass and Bones.

Key Points

  • The best song, "Pity Party", sets the album's high-energy template with fiery guitars and daring vocals.
  • The album's core strength is its emotional daring, alternating raucous hit-singles with intimate ballads that showcase Milner.

Themes

anger and pain emotional daring new wave/indie pop fusion stripped-down balladry