Too Much Too Soon received positive reviews from contemporary critics. Reviewing for
Rolling Stone in June 1974,
Dave Marsh hailed the New York Dolls as the leading hard rock band in the US and noted what he felt was Nolan's competent drumming, Johansen's ability to add depth to his characters, and Thunders's innovative guitar playing. Marsh especially praised his playing on "Chatterbox", calling it "a classic", and believed even the most brazen songs sounded successful because Morton's production highlighted the group's more unrefined musical qualities. Writing for
Creem magazine, Christgau said the polished
sound reproduction preserved the band's raw qualities, especially in the case of Johansen's vocals and Nolan's drumming, and remarked that Rundgren "should be ashamed—Shadow Morton has gotten more out of the Dolls than they can give us live on any but their best nights."
Robert Hilburn from the
Los Angeles Times felt
Too Much Too Soon was a better-produced album that proved the band to be "the real thing", calling it the best record of derisive
punk rock since
Exile on Main St. by
the Rolling Stones in 1972. In
The New Yorker, Ellen Willis wrote that she learned to appreciate
Too Much Too Soon more than
New York Dolls after seeing the band perform songs from the former album in concert, particularly "Human Being" and "Puss 'n' Boots", while Ron Ross from
Phonograph Record magazine said the group's "easy going ironic sensibility" was expressed "far more amusingly and accessibly" here than on their debut album.
Tom Hull, in a review published in
Overdose, gave the album an A-minus and said that rationalizing one's love of the Dolls "misses the point". Along with being "cute", they are "just about the best really hard rock band around, and in an age of cleverness and chic that's mighty good to see", Hull concluded. Some reviewers were critical of
Too Much Too Soon for what they felt was a poorly recorded and
overproduced sound. In a negative review for
NME,
Nick Kent said it sounded cluttered and "shot through with unfulfilled potential", while
Circus magazine panned the record as "cut after cut of annoying screeching". It was nonetheless voted the tenth best album of 1974 in the
Pazz & Jop, an annual poll of American critics nationwide, published in
The Village Voice. Willis, one of the critics polled, listed it as her fifth favorite record of the year. Christgau, the poll's creator and supervisor, named it third best.
Impact and reappraisal Along with the New York Dolls' first album,
Too Much Too Soon became one of the most popular
cult records in rock music. According to
AllMusic senior editor
Stephen Thomas Erlewine, the group predated punk rock with their "gleeful sleaziness and reckless sound" on the record, which he said was embellished by Morton's production details and exemplified by "musically visceral and dangerous" songs such as "Human Being". Music critic
Chuck Eddy contends that a wide array of artists, including
Cyndi Lauper and
Celtic Frost, have "
something rooted here", adding that Johansen's "rape-and-pillage of rock 'n' roll's past" foresaw the
postmodern "scavenger-hunting" of
the Cramps,
Beastie Boys and
David Lee Roth. At the end of the 1970s,
Too Much Too Soon appeared on decade-end favorite albums lists by Christgau, who ranked it fourth in the
Voice, and Richard Cromelin, who wrote in the
Los Angeles Times that Morton's production made it slightly better than
New York Dolls. In 1985,
Sounds magazine ranked it sixtieth on its list of the 100 best albums of all time. After it was
reissued by Mercury in 1987, Don McLeese of the
Chicago Sun-Times wrote that Morton's production highlighted the New York Dolls' sense of humor and was rendered vividly by the CD
remaster. However, he felt
Too Much Too Soon was marred by inconsistent material and rated it lower than their first record. In a review of the reissue, Don Waller of the
Los Angeles Times said the album was underappreciated and as much an "instant classic" as
New York Dolls. In 2005,
Too Much Too Soon was remastered and reissued by
Hip-O Select and Mercury, after which Christgau wrote in
Blender that both it and
New York Dolls make up "a priceless
proto-punk legacy". He wrote that although Johansen's best original songs are on the first record,
Too Much Too Soon has consistent
hooks, clever lyrics, and exceptional cover songs, including "two R&B novelties whose theatrical potential was barely noticed until the Dolls penetrated their holy essence". That same year, rock journalist
Toby Creswell named "Babylon" as one of the greatest songs of all time in his book
1001 Songs. In the
Encyclopedia of Popular Music (2006),
Colin Larkin felt that the band's issues with alcohol and other drugs affected their performance on the record, which he deemed "a charismatic collection of punk/glam-rock anthems, typically delivered with 'wasted' cool". == Track listing ==