Initial critical response to
Wrath was positive. At
Metacritic, which assigns a
normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, the album has received an
average score of 74, based on 14 reviews. The
Los Angeles Times stated that Lamb of God "roots its best songs in a
Motörhead swagger that makes the growly moments stickier and gives the stadium-sized choruses a hint of righteous evil."
Spin gave it a six out of ten and stated: "The latest outburst of controlled aggression from these veteran Virginia metallurgists proves that consistency is a blessing and a curse. As always, the palm-muted jackhammer riffs and Randy Blythe's elastic denunciations of liars, hypocrites, and lying hypocrites are frightfully precise. [...] But primally satisfying as it is, the band's meat-and-taters thrash leaves one hungry for some
Mastodon-style lateral thinking. Or not."
AllMusic has given it mixed comments, stating: "There's no denying the sheer "angry basement workout/summer garage weightlifting" potential that
Wrath's perfectly acceptable 45-minute running time offers, but without a single hook that sticks around long enough to reel in the fish, all you've got is bait."
Rolling Stone also gave a negative review on it, saying, "the fearsome fivesome opt for a somewhat varied but hardly visionary attack mode, occasionally lurching into a groove or tune. The song titles betray a cynicism over military and religious affairs, but growl-to-screech front-monster Randy Blythe never makes his anger coherent [...]
Wrath opens and closes with spans of placid subtlety - a welcome touch that doesn't make up for all the raging roteness in between. ==Awards==