Sorry For Party Rocking

| LMFAO

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52.9%
  • Reviews Counted:17

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Sorry For Party Rocking

Sorry for Party Rocking is the second and final studio album by LMFAO. It was released June 21, 2011, physically and digitally by Interscope Records as the follow-up to their debut album Party Rock (2009). "Party Rock Anthem" was the first single released from the album and was an international hit. The second single was "Champagne Showers" and reached number eight in New Zealand, and nine in Australia. It became an international hit, also charting in France, Ireland, and Austria. The third single, "Sexy and I Know It" was released on September 16, 2011. It peaked at number one on the US Billboard Hot 100 and also topped the charts in Australia, Canada, and New Zealand. "Sorry for Party Rocking" was released on January 9, 2012 as the fourth single from the album and peaked at number 8 in Belgium, 16 in France, 18 in Ireland, 19 on the US Pop Songs, 23 in the United Kingdom, 27 in New Zealand, 31 in Canada, 32 in Australia, and 49 on the Billboard Hot 100. - Wikipedia

Critic Reviews

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  • NME

    A soul destroying second record 

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  • Rolling Stone

    making for a disc of brain-cell-depleting jams 

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  • The Gaurdian

    Who knows? Who cares? LMFAO clearly don't, or else their whole album wouldn't reek of this-will-do.  

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  • BBC

    Blinkered beats and dunderheaded lyricism – but compellingly committed nonetheless. 

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  • We Got This Covered

    I’m sick and tired of critics bashing LMFAO. If you don’t see the brilliance of a song like Party Rock Anthem and don’t understand why it’s so popular then you’re not the right person to be reviewing or listening to this album. 

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  • Stanford Daily

    To be blunt, every song sounds the same, and a run-through of “Sorry for Party Rocking” leaves listeners wanting a little more. 

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  • AllMusic

    it's clear that chart-driven pop circa the second decade of the millennium rarely gets much better than LMFAO here.  

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  • Digital Spy

    If this was their idea of an apology, it would have been more polite to say nothing at all. 

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  • Pop Matters

    Sorry for Party Rocking remains a remarkably dull album. 

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  • The Telegraph

    drop the irony but keep the manifesto, building a second album of dance-able electronic hip hop around an infectious desire to have a good time.  

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  • The Independent

    Fun in extremely small doses. 

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  • No Ripcord

    The album does have one redeeming aspect preventing its plunge into epic echelons of suck 

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  • IGN

    LMFAO prove more than capable of delivering pop hits with the best of them. 

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  • Billboard

    those with an appreciation for big, dumb fun may even enjoy listening to tracks 

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  • Daily Star

    This is not Jay Z's Black Album. But if you fancy some no-brainer, feel-good dance music to dance to like a moron then this is for you.  

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  • The Arts Desk

    They claim their second album is "more refined" - but it isn't unless your idea of refined is pole dancing to Limp Bizkit. 

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  • YoRapper

    I do believe LMFAO does it all in the name of “fun” and with a sense of irony. 

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