(pictured in 2010) was one of the album's earliest supporters
New York Dolls received acclaim from contemporary reviewers. In a rave review for
NME, published in August 1973,
Nick Kent said the band's raunchy style of rock and roll had been vividly recorded by Rundgren on an album that, besides
Iggy and the Stooges'
Raw Power (1973), serves as the only one "so far to fully define just exactly where 1970s rock should be coming from".
Trouser Press founder and editor Ira Robbins viewed
New York Dolls as an innovative record, brilliantly chaotic, and well produced by Rundgren.
Ellen Willis, writing for
The New Yorker, said it is by far 1973's most compelling hard rock album and that at least half of its songs are immediate classics, particularly "Personality Crisis" and "Trash", which she called "transcendent". In
Newsday, Christgau hailed the New York Dolls as "the best hard rock band in the country and maybe the world right now", writing that their "special genius" is combining the shrewd songwriting savvy of early-1960s pop with the anarchic sound of late-1960s
heavy metal. He claimed that the record's frenzied approach, various emotions, and wild noise convey Manhattan's harsh, deviant thrill better than
the Velvet Underground. In an overall positive review,
Rolling Stone critic
Tony Glover found the band's impressive live sound to be mostly preserved on the album. However, he was slightly critical of production flourishes and overdubs, feeling that they make some lyrics sound incomprehensible and some choruses too sonorous. Although he was surprised at how well Rundgren's production works with the group's raunchy sound on most of the songs, Glover ultimately asked whether or not "the record alone will impress as much as seeing them live (they're a highly
watchable group)." Years later, Christgau would also voice that the album is "in fact a little botched aurally", but still regarded it as a classic.
Impact and reappraisal New York Dolls has been called one of the greatest debut albums in rock music, one of the genre's most popular cult records, and a foundation for the late 1970s
punk rock movement.
Chuck Eddy considers it crucial to rock's evolution. The album influenced many rock and roll, punk, and
glam rock groups, including the
Ramones,
Kiss, the
Sex Pistols,
the Damned, and
Guns N' Roses. Chris Smith, in
101 Albums That Changed Popular Music (2009), says the Dolls's amateurish musicianship on the album undermined the musical sophistication of earlier popular music such as
Pink Floyd's recent
The Dark Side of the Moon (1973).
The Guardian included it in its list of "1000 albums to hear before you die" and called it "an efficacious antidote to the excesses of prog rock". According to Sylvain, the album's influence on punk can be attributed to how Rundgren recorded Sylvain's guitar through the left speaker and Thunders' guitar on the right side, an orientation younger bands such as the Ramones and the Sex Pistols subsequently adopted. Rundgren, on the other hand, was amused by how the record became considered a precursor to the punk movement: "The irony is that I wound up producing the seminal punk album, but I was never really thought of as a punk producer, and I never got called by punk acts. They probably thought I was too expensive for what they were going for. But the Dolls didn't really consider themselves punk." It was English singer
Morrissey's favorite album, and according to
Paul Myers, the record "struck such a chord with [him] that he was not only moved to form his own influential group,
The Smiths ... but would eventually convince the surviving Dolls to reunite [in 2004]". According to
The Mojo Collection (2007),
New York Dolls ignited punk rock and could still inspire more movements because of the music's abundant attitude and passion, while
Encyclopedia of Popular Music writer
Colin Larkin deems it "a major landmark in rock history, oozing attitude, vitality and controversy from every note". Writing for
AllMusic, Erlewine – the website's senior editor – claims that
New York Dolls is a more quintessential
proto-punk album than any of the Stooges' releases because of how it "plunders history while celebrating it, creating a sleazy
urban mythology along the way".
David Fricke considers it to be a more definitive glam rock album than
David Bowie's
Ziggy Stardust (1972) or anything by
Marc Bolan because of how the band "captured both the glory and sorrow of glam, the high jinx and wasted youth, with electric photorealism". In
The New Rolling Stone Album Guide (2004), Joe Gross calls it an "absolutely essential" record and "epic sleaze, the sound of five young men shaping the big city in their own scuzzy image".
Professional rankings New York Dolls appears frequently on professional listings of the greatest albums. In 1978, it was voted 199th in
Paul Gambaccini's book ''Rock Critics' Choice: The Top 200 Albums
, which polled a number of leading music journalists and record collectors. Christgau, one of the critics polled, ranked it as the 15th best album of the 1970s in The Village Voice'' the following year – 11 spots behind the Dolls' second album
Too Much Too Soon (1974), although years later he would say the first album should be ranked ahead and was his favorite rock album.
New York Dolls was included in
Neil Strauss's 1996 list of the 100 most influential
alternative records, and the
Spin Alternative Record Guide (1995) named it the 70th best alternative album. In 2002, it was included on a list published by
Q of the 100 best punk records, while
Mojo named it both the 13th greatest punk album and the 49th greatest album of all time.
Rolling Stone placed the record at number 213 on
its 500 greatest albums list in 2003 and "Personality Crisis" at number 271 on
its 500 greatest songs list the following year. In 2007,
Mojo polled a panel of prominent recording artists and songwriters for the magazine's "100 Records That Changed the World" publication, in which
New York Dolls was voted the 39th most influential and inspirational record ever. In 2013, it placed at number 355 on
NMEs list of the 500 greatest albums of all time. == Track listing ==