"The band's best bass-driven dance floor bangers and stately, textured landscapes are all here, and there are a couple of fresh surprises, too... WfaNFC weave woozy atmospheres for an intoxicated ride home bathed in subway fluorescent or headlight halogen... Businessmen & Ghosts is a long-overdue U.S. document of a band that might just be getting really interesting." - Pitchfork Media
"WFANFC is about both quantity and quality... As their songs shift from noisy shoegaze to cinematic beauty to Madchester beats, we're taken on one hell of a ride...This band should be fucking huge" - The Tripwire
"Sludgy neo-baggy with a more sinister edge than vintage Madchester" - Playboy
"On "Rocket," Working for a Nuclear Free City attempts to solve some of life's most vexing problems. But as the answers get more outrageous, and the lessons get harder to come by, the music's momentum starts to take over." - NPR
"it seems WFANFC have begun to achieve what they originally set out to do:We want to create a piece of work that will stand the test of time and be remembered." - Amazon
"Working for a Nuclear Free City is a band worth listening to, and worth watching out for." - Popmatters
"an almost flawless lucid-dream trip through a thousand fantastical influences" - Stylus Magazine
"a brilliant musical journey through myriad genres and time, folding in elements of British Invasion, '70s rock, post-punk, baggy, electronica, space rock, and even Afro-beat. " - AllMusic
"It's a splendid introduction to one of Britain's most stunning acts, capturing every side of this multi-faceted gem of a group." - AllMusic
"it just sounds so damn good." - The Times
"their mix of psychedelia, krautrock and electronic does sound strange - deliciously so." - NME
"An invigorating reinvention of the sound of Manchester. Most refreshing." - Q Magazine
Constantly shifting musical sands during their rolling course, they swamp layers of beauty, beats, spills and thrills that waft you skyward, pull you to the dancefloor, blow your mind and soothe your soul." - BBC