Album Summary
Oedipus Schmoedipus is an album by the English musician Barry Adamson, released in 1996. Like Adamson's previous albums, Oedipus Schmoedipus was conceived as a soundtrack to an imaginary film. The album peaked at No. 51 on the UK Albums Chart."Something Wicked This Way Comes" appears in the David Lynch film Lost Highway.
Keywords from Reviews
Reviews
Sort by:
Top
Date
Aug 15 2022
Author
Naming the first track on your record “Set Controls for the Heart of the Pelvis” is a statement. Of what, I’m not entirely sure, but it’s cool that he got Austin Powers to do a guest vocal.
If you like the electronic lounge-pop of bands like Air and Stereolab, but wish they did it with a less deft touch, Oedipus Schmoedipus’ first few tracks might be for you.
Perhaps you prefer Lynchian horror soundscapes, might I direct you to “It’s Business as Usual” or “Dirty Barry”? Coincidentally, “Something Wicked This Way Comes” appears in “Lost Highway” - it took me a minute to figure where I had heard it before.
Speaking of David Lynch, the overtly digital jazz on “Miles” could’ve earned a spot in Mulholland Drive, perhaps as the soundtrack for the dance sequence on the soundstage of “The Sylvia North Story”.
I’m doing my best with this one, but fuck me, it’s taxing. I mean, I could talk about David Lynch all day, but he’s not the focus here.
A few days ago, in a review of Red Snapper’s “Our Aim is to Satisfy”, I bemoaned the list maker’s inclusion of albums from the late 90’s and early aughts that haven’t aged particularly well. Add this record to that pile.
Not that this record doesn’t have its moments, but I suspect having a high tolerance for film noir-cheese is a requirement for full enjoyment. If you spend your evenings skulking around dimly lit alleys in a trench coat…boy, have I got an album for you.
If you’re still reading this after all my shit-talk, let me recommend 3 records that occupy a similar musical space to Oedipus Schmoedipus, that have held up well and are actually worth hearing before you die. Two of the three, shockingly, are not included on the 1001 albums list:
Air - The Virgin Suicides
Stereolab - Dots & Loops (possibly the most egregious exclusion from the list)
Tortoise - TNT (another glaring omission, imo)
Or, you could just watch a David Lynch film or two.
May 09 2021
Author
Cool! Then weird.. Then cool! Then scary
May 09 2021
Author
What a fun, weird ride.
Some great sax work here.
Business as Usual was miserable to listen to.
The whole project was strange, but at least he was trying something. At least it's not another "Debut album by British pop band" like 500+ of the albums on here.
Aug 25 2022
Author
Nice enough background music. In a list of 1001 albums I must listen to before I die, though? Let's let "background music" be a disqualifier, shall we?
Jun 21 2024
Author
Making another soundtrack to an imagined film because nobody will let me make a soundtrack to a real film
Sep 26 2022
Author
It's like if Tom Waits was mediocre.
Oct 15 2020
Author
Soundtrack for a movie that doesn't exist
Dec 03 2021
Author
wowwwww!!! I had never heard of this artist, album, or any of these tracks before. This is most definitely an Elaine album. Weird, sometimes MJQ, sometimes frightening. Eclectic. Spotify played Badalamenti’s Dance of the Dream Man (from Twin Peaks) right after. All you really need to know.
Jun 14 2021
Author
A brilliant surreal genre defying album. Part sleazy lounge music, part funk, part jazz - will be back for more
May 12 2021
Author
Very atmospheric album, some great compositions, and also lots of crazy weird stuff. I enjoy the variety while still maintaining a sort of mysterious vibe throughout.
Aug 15 2022
Author
I was not expecting this on the list.
I thought this was an underrated oddity that no one actually listened to aside from anal music geeks. I had assumed that no one really cared about an album from that fella from Magazine that isn't the main fella from Magazine, clearly not. It's the soundtrack to a movie that doesn't exist, featuring Nick Cave, Billy Mackenzie and Jarvis Cocker, and it's every bit as quirky, sleazy and kitsch as the soundtrack to a movie that doesn't exist, featuring Nick Cave, Billy Mackenzie and Jarvis Cocker, should be. If the movie was real, it would for sure be directed by David Lynch. I thoroughly enjoyed revisiting this gem.
May 07 2021
Author
Simultaneously groovy, clever, funny, surreal, and odd. Super interesting!
Jun 26 2024
Author
As with Moss Side Story, I loved this. It's amazing, I think. Each track paints such a picture. I'm going to listen to Soul Murder now because I want more Barry Adamson!
Mar 02 2023
Author
What's that cover? Am I listening to black metal today?
Oedipus Schmoedipus? This must be weird AF. Maybe weird for the sake of being weird.
Oh. Experimental music. I'm excited. I expect to hear some bells and electric drills and shit.
A soundtrack to an imaginary movie? I heard something like that before...
Was that a Barrett-era Pink Floyd cover? Wow. Wait a minute. It says... pelvis.
So it's trip hop but it's actually trippy.
A Miles Davis impression? Daring.
A bit scary sometimes, ngl.
Lol.
I've never had an album that constantly surprises me for a while. What an experience. What a treat.
Feb 15 2024
Author
had to listen to it like 4 times to make up my mind and it got better each time
Dec 15 2021
Author
So glad this popped up. Never heard of the guy before, now this album is in my playlists. Brilliant stuff
Apr 30 2021
Author
Haven't you heard, my name rhymes with Elvis
Sep 23 2022
Author
Struggling to get through this one. Every time one of these songs starts to develop into something good, he introduces something cheesy and it all comes crashing down. If the idea is to be the soundtrack to an imaginary film, I keep thinking it's a disappointing sequel to The Saint (which to be clear is already a pale imitation). The strongest feeling I get from this is that I'd much rather listen its influences (blaxploitation soundtracks, Madchester/electronica). Calling it a 2, but that's generous.
Feb 15 2023
Author
with an name like Oedipus Shmoedipus this album had high standards to live up to and it did it so well. absolutely crazy from start to finish. from truly uncomfortable techno/spoken word to melancholic piano led orchestral arrangements. crazy. so good
Jun 08 2022
Author
very good album - enjoyed it - a hidden gem and want to listen to more.
Nov 19 2021
Author
A brilliant surreal genre defying album. Part sleazy lounge music, part funk, part jazz - will be back for more
Feb 18 2024
Author
Entirely too much moaning. Adamson’s album, styled as a soundtrack to an imaginary movie, works well when it leans into the instrumental aspects of a score. The spy/noir jazz is smooth, deadly, and bombastic, and definitely worth listening to again. However, some of the more experimental tracks are too avant garde for the casual listen, and are deeply creepy and/or sexual. Overall, a tongue-in-cheek, darkly comedic noir soundtrack that lands in some places and misses in disturbing ways.
Stand out tracks include “The Vibes Ain’t Nothing But The Vibes”, “In A Moment of Clarity”, “Vermillion Kisses”, “The Big Bamboozle”, and “The Sweetest Embrace”.
Mar 17 2021
Author
Some great jams counterbalanced by some absolutely bat shit ones. Best track: Set The Controls For The Heart Of The Pelvis
Sep 26 2022
Author
Some cool stuff in this album. But mainly instrumental and weird. He is trying to make something different and that he achieved.
Aug 25 2025
Author
second "album made as a soundtrack to a movie" in a row (vanishing point by primal scream was yesterday), and you know what? here for it. more albums like this please. more bed time stories about borderline personality disorder maiden please.
highlights - something wicked this way comes, the vibes ain't nothing but the vibes, achieved in the valley of the dolls
Jul 04 2024
Author
Hands up who has owned this for nigh-on 30 years?
Just me then?!
Surprised to see such an obscurity here, still play it quite regularly for the vibes (literally). I really enjoy its "cinematic" style even though this has its detractors in the peanut gallery here; also features one of Nick Cave's finer tunes and the fabulous voice of Billy Mackenzie. Funny how I knew Barry Adamson from this but not Magazine until recently! Hope you all enjoyed it
Oct 12 2023
Author
So ... what is this ?! The album seems to be all over the place in terms of tone and genre. I think it starts on "psychadelic 70's summer of love" then goes to "light goth" with some "trance 80's" and I just can't work out if I like it or not.
Feb 04 2022
Author
Dit doet me aan Air denken. Beetje film-achtige muziek. Heel interessant project.
Ik vind de melodietjes soms een beetje lift-muziek maar in combinatie met film-geluiden of een relaxte beat heeft het toch iets speciaals.
Mar 17 2021
Author
Interesting album; some nice Primal Scream esque grooves and abstract storytelling. Favourite song is 'The Sweetest Embrace' sung by Nick Cave.
Jun 04 2024
Author
From the other reviews on here, I was expecting some sort of hellishly unlistenable soundscape, but that wasn't too bad. At least it was trying something. It would have scored higher but one of my least favourite things in music is a horny Jarvis Cocker
Nov 15 2023
Author
Like a lot of others, I’m intrigued at this albums inclusion on the list. Another reviewer made the point that most of these odd picks are late 90’s, early naughties, usually British albums that have not been vindicated by history. I am left wondering whether or not this was nixed from later editions.
As music, this is mostly enjoyable. The weirder tracks worked well at telling what little story is discernible and the more regular tracks were mostly fun little cod-Jazz, although I could have done without the version of Miles, the only actual Jazz standard on here, which Adamson has misnamed, intentionally or not, I can’t tell.
My biggest problem is with the concept rather than the music. Making a soundtrack to a fake movie is unique, or would be if Adamson hadn’t done it four or five times by this point. But it doesn’t actually sound like any film scores I’ve ever sat down to. It’s supposed to be a Noir I guess, but so much of the songs sound so un-Noir-ish that it took me a couple of tracks to get that concept. Although, I praised the use of weirder tracks to tell the story, thinking specifically about the tracks with narration, I’m not sure they actually work as either music to be listened to independently of the album’s context, or as incidental music for a film. It’d be a little weird to have scenes from a film just pasted over the soundtrack with little rhyme or reason.
The only album I can think to compare Oedipus Schmoedipus to is the other late 90’s British mostly instrumental music I’ve had the chance to listen to recently, Fatboy Slim’s Better Living Through Chemistry. And I think the difference is ultimately down to personality. I get more of Norman Cook in his music than I do Barry Adamson. The only thing that we have to base Adamson’s personality on is the concept, which is just a bit weird, and the titles, which are just a bit weird. And I’m not even sure he wrote all of the titles himself, because Set The Controls For The Heart Of The Pelvis is 100% a Jarvis Cocker line. It just doesn’t feel as if Barry Adamson puts much of himself into his music, and for that I’m not sure how I feel about the album as a whole. I’m gonna go 3 stars out of five, because I enjoyed it more than I didn’t, but this is the instance so far that I most wish we could give half rankings, cos this is definitely a 2.5 if ever there was one
Jul 10 2025
Author
Cheesy ersatz soundtrack music, vibing on the then-fashionable trip-hop style. Cool at its best (Set the Controls, Something Wicked This Way Comes), aimless in middle (Dirty Barry), just pointless jazz-lite noodling at worst (Miles, The Vibes Ain't Nothin' But The Vibes). The closer to "jazz styling" that this album gets, the more unlistenable it becomes, especially that horrible drum programming. The cheesy synth tones don't help either.
Interesting appearance by Atticus Ross, programming the first 6 tracks. You can hear his attention to texture that he later took to his soundtrack collaborations with Trent Reznor.
Nick Cave's cameo stands out as the rare example of an actual song with charisma and presence.
Jan 13 2025
Author
Heard some songs from it before. And as somebody who was really into 90s British music when I was a teen I can just TELL that the author of this list must've been a teen/young adult in the 90s in the UK because there's no other explanation for why somebody would think this album a must-listen for everybody around the world. The tracks I like from it I do like, but as a whole it isn't exceptional in any way.
2/5
Oct 04 2024
Author
A concept album I really didn't enjoy. It's really trying to act like it is saying something. Disliked the spoke word stuff (like really, making me listen to a 4 minute 30 second creepy voice message?) Redeemable only by the instrumental tracks.
Oct 02 2024
Author
Self indulgent garbage. Might have been cheaper than therapy.
Jul 04 2024
Author
I respect Adamson - especially for Magazine - and admire the craft in this, and understand how this might work well as a film soundtrack. The words I caught are funny and entertaining; Jarvis Cocker’s opening turn is a grabber.
Those elements aside, this left no more impression on me than passing air.
Oct 13 2025
Author
Fastest 1 I’ve given
Sep 27 2024
Author
Electronic-avant-garde-jazz fusion? The answer to a question I never would have asked.
Sep 24 2024
Author
Well, once again I have to say, this just isn’t my thing. I’m not sure whose thing this would be, and I am not too sure that I would want to meet them either. I only listened to a minute or two of most of the songs, with the exception of “it’s Business As Usual”. I was intrigued by this disturbing track, and had to see how the voice message ended. For me, the best thing about this album was its title. I’ll be trying to forget about this album.
Dec 03 2021
Author
Strange mix of songs. I'm also mortified that a bass player would try to make a bass sound like it. It sounds like General Midi on Miles(tones). Jarvis, while a national treasure is a creepy man. I don't like him ejaculating out of my headphones.
Nov 23 2025
Author
Just incredible
Nov 05 2025
Author
Mjööög skemmtileg plata. Algjört rugl. Þrennan sem vinnur með honum geggjuð. Útum allt en samt heildstætt verk.
Nov 05 2025
Author
Barry er mjög áhugaverður og þetta var mjög áhugaverð plata. Alls konar stefnur og stílar. Jarvis og Nick krydduðuð þetta líka vel. Skemmtilegt þegar listann kynnir mann fyrir einhverju nýju sem er í rauninni gott.
Nov 04 2025
Author
If I had to sum up this album, I’d call it a trip hop jazz noir soundtrack to a movie that doesn’t exist. The one thing that remains consistent throughout is its cinematic nature. It fully embraces the feel of a soundtrack, but without the visuals. Some parts reminded me of 90s trip hop and the funky big beat movement from the 90s era electronic scene. Other moments lean into quiet, spoken word segments, evoking imagery of a jazz band playing in the corner of a dark, smoke filled lounge, slowly building toward dramatic, big band style climaxes. It’s a really cool album, and I liked it a lot, but I will say it starts to feel a bit long toward the end, almost like it’s dragging. Still, it’s a cool listening experience and one of the more unique albums I’ve heard recently.
Sep 30 2025
Author
New to me, and a fascinating and pleasant surprise. This, for me, is why I do this.
Sep 29 2025
Author
If I had to sum up this album, I’d call it a trip hop jazz noir soundtrack to a movie that doesn’t exist. The one thing that remains consistent throughout is its cinematic nature. It fully embraces the feel of a soundtrack, but without the visuals. Some parts reminded me of 90s trip hop and the funky big beat movement from the 90s era electronic scene. Other moments lean into quiet, spoken word segments, evoking imagery of a jazz band playing in the corner of a dark, smoke filled lounge, slowly building toward dramatic, big band style climaxes. It’s a really cool album, and I liked it a lot, but I will say it starts to feel a bit long toward the end, almost like it’s dragging. Still, it’s a cool listening experience and one of the more unique albums I’ve heard recently.
Sep 27 2025
Author
Increíble. Un discazo que nos demuestra que la música experimental no está peleada con las melodías atractivas, el jazz melancólico y hasta el blues más llegador. Tiene canciones rarísimas pero que siempre se sienten hipnotizantes. Los metales son una locura, la voz de Adamson es única y tiene arreglos que se siente que podrían volverme loco. Vaya, trae por ahí hasta un cuento de hadas.
Aug 12 2025
Author
An exciting and wildly genre-shifting album where Barry Adamson blends jazz, noir, funk, and cinematic soundscapes into a richly atmospheric whole. The moods shift from sensual and laid-back to intense and dramatic, as if it were the soundtrack to a film constantly changing scenes and plot. Guest appearances from Jarvis Cocker and Nick Cave add extra depth and color. The album feels both playful and meticulously crafted, a work that draws the listener into its own unique universe.
5/5
Aug 01 2025
Author
10/10…psychedelic trip hop
after 5 times of listening the rating goes up from 7/10 at 10/10… take your time to listen.
Jul 23 2025
Author
Banger after banger after banger, washing over my brain like a cool breeze on a hot day.
Jul 21 2025
Author
This album is fucking crazy, like a whole soundtrack for a made up film, that's just so amazing. It honestly sounds like it'd be a great film too--it's not shocking that a song on here ended up in a David Lynch film, because this sounds like it'd a score a movie that he directed. This album runs the gamut in terms of feelings--from comical to sexy to thrilling, all with a sinister air that really hooked me in and made me want to know what would happen next. The sound reminded me a lot of a favorite album of mine, Music to Make Love to Your Old Lady By by Lovage, and I always thought that the each of the songs on that album sounded like the soundtracks to a bunch of short films.
I deeply appreciate creatively ambitious works like this, and it really hit for me. A definite 5/5.
Jul 14 2025
Author
I was familiar Adamson’s work from the Lost Highway soundtrack but never dug into his work before. So stoked this album was suggested. This dude does whatever the fu*k he wants and I’m here for it. Great record.
Jun 24 2025
Author
4.5
Jun 11 2025
Author
Banger after banger. It’s a soundtrack to a movie that doesn’t exist… that’s probably my favorite movie.
May 28 2025
Author
trange..... definitely felt like occupying someone else's head. Theatrical.
May 12 2025
Author
Unique album. Each track dripping with atmosphere, a delightful mishmash of styles. 4.55
May 11 2025
Author
Perfect soundtrack to life love the atmosphere the different directions each track takes.
Apr 25 2025
Author
Had to listen to this 4 times before I felt (mostly) ready to give it a rating. I don't think I've ever had this kind of reaction to an album before and I view that as a very positive thing. Sometimes it's dancey proto-acid house, sometimes it's got big-band vibes, other times free jazz, then it just decides to go full exotica. This is the kind of album I'll think about when I can't sleep, pondering it like an unsolvable riddle. I'm not SURE I love it. but it deserves 5 stars just for how long its made me consider things.
Apr 24 2025
Author
Weird and fun
Apr 11 2025
Author
This was so good. Every track was different from every other track in genre/style/sound, but they were all so amazingly good and unexpectedly bizarrely awesome to listen to. I have no idea who Barry Adamson is or what role he played in making this album (instrumentalist? vocalist? arranger? producer?) but I don't really care because it as just good music that I loved to listen to so much that I listened all the way through twice, and I kinda want to go again. Five stars easily.
Mar 12 2025
Author
That's the most enjoyably weird album I've gotten on this list to date.
Feb 10 2025
Author
Very interesting album.
Jan 13 2025
Author
Supremely atmospheric, great cameos.
Jan 10 2025
Author
1996 art rock, bdb
Jan 08 2025
Author
A wild, dark, messy noir film that pulls your attention and feelings with only sound.
Really fascinating to make music for a movie that doesn't exist. Love the musical journey Barry has been on, especially that he started all of this as a bassist.
Nov 29 2024
Author
This is a bit of an interesting find in this list - it's weird, but in the same mesmerising way twin peaks is. There's a structure, and it experiments over the established and does it well
Nov 29 2024
Author
Very good. Never heard of this record before
Nov 11 2024
Author
This was a trip. Unexpected!
Oct 18 2024
Author
I spent my entire time listening to this album completely at a loss trying to figure it out. It is very much all over the map. It's in one moment blissful, then funky in the next, then sinister, then depressed, then cheery. At times it feels like there's an unspoken narrative and at time there's a very explicit narrative. But the narratives, said or unsaid, don't seem to match.
Is it meant to be a collection of stories or one very winding road telling all the stops of one person's story? I really don't know. I don't know how to put this album into words. All I know is that it is by far one of the most interesting albums I've received on this album generator project. For that I really enjoyed it.
Sep 30 2024
Author
Before we talk about this album we need to talk about movies. David Lynch is probably my all time favorite director, and I just watched Lost Highway for the first time about a month ago. Such a weird and creepy movie, highly recommend if you like weird art films. Something Wicked This Way Comes plays in the scene where the mystery man is first introduced (great scene!). I can see why Lynch likes this album and if I had to guess Lynch's favorite song from this album it would probably be Business As Usual.
Ok, now the album. First off, Oedipus Schmoedipus is such a funny title. I think this is the only time I've ever actually laughed at an album title. Not really sure why I am seeing so many 1's and 2's this is just a chill little trip hop album. Never mind some of these songs are not so chill (still very good though).
I don't want to be a contrarian, but I did really enjoy this album. It is really weird and it is something you will never forget. I wish this list had more stuff like this album.
I am definitely going to need to check this one out again.
Low 5.
Jun 26 2024
Author
I am totally diggin’ what this Barry Adamson cat is puttin’ down!
Jun 26 2024
Author
Wowee!
Whatever I was missing in Adamson's Moss Side Story, I have found in spades in Oedipus Schmoedipus. A compelling listen from start to finish.
Hands down, this is a thumbs up!!
Jun 26 2024
Author
No idea what I was getting into, but Set Controls For the Heart of the Pelvis came out of the gate with such a groove that pegged my ranking needle on a 5. Incredible!
Then that familiar Spooky sample opened Something Wicked This Way Comes and I added that to my favorite Halloween songs playlist in the first thirty seconds.
Really nice, atmospheric, right up my alley. Barry Adamson was sorely missing from my consciousness. Terrific!!!!
May 15 2024
Author
Wow. Front to back I've never been able to feel a story through music as vividly as this album. Set the Controls as the front and ending credits does a great job. Something Wicked feels like a character introduction. It's business as Usual introduces conflict and dirty Barry turns it up a notch. The track is noisy, claustrophobic, sinister, and kinetic. Achieved in the Valley of Dolls is clever and triumphant. Vermillion Kisses is a worthwhile interlude. The big bamboozle is big and boisterous. The Sweetest Embrace is the finale and mourns the ending of the story and the death of innocence. Then the album ends with a well-timed credits track, it doesn't overstay it's welcome and leaves the listener on a positive note.
I think that the three songs with lyrics were all excellent. The album gives enough space that it isn't a 50-minute assault. It builds things up and the transitions, like that between the smooth tracks like Miles or a moment of Clarity, feel organic. Rather than a roller coaster with twists and turns, it feels like a lifetime with ups and downs, fasts and slows.
This album surprised and impressed me over and over again. I won't be listening to it often, but I will certainly revisit in whole when I want to experience the rich soundscape that it is. As a concept and as it is executed, I believe that it is near perfect.
Apr 10 2024
Author
Very very cool
Mar 14 2024
Author
So groovy. Loved learning the history behind this record and the strange context it came from
Feb 26 2024
Author
I don’t think I’ve ever heard of Barry Adamson before. I’m not entirely sure what to expect of this album. The name Oedipus Schmoedipus makes me a little wary. Oedipus was a bit of an odd fellow, wasn’t he.
Songs I already knew: none
Favourites: Something Wicked This Way Comes, The Sweetest Embrace
This was a really pleasant album. It felt alt-rock at times, and instrumental jazz at others but somehow it works really well. It even has tracks that sound closer to an orchestral soundtrack. The lack of vocals in a lot of the songs really helps the music shine, and the tracks that do include singing can be appreciated all the more for it. This album is so versatile, spanning many genres yet tying together fantastically. This surprised me, and I like it a lot.
Feb 11 2024
Author
This was not my first taste of Adamson, but wow is this one incredible. He mixes so many different styles on this one. There is a DJ Shadow like quality to this, only more in the "art rock" vein. Not his best, but an excellent part of his catalog 9.1/10
Feb 04 2024
Author
A lot of fun listening to this one.
Jan 10 2024
Author
Can't believe I'd never heard of this guy before now. Had to look him up and see more of his works. Saw this came out early 90s. Sorry I missed it then, it would have been a staple of my more drug-addled days.
Jan 04 2024
Author
Great discovery. He also listened to Massive Attack
Dec 20 2023
Author
кино ебаное. буквально. Барри Адамсон рил гений, сделать альбом как фильм это надо уметь. я в целом люблю такую кинематографичную музыку, арт рок или вроде того, под которую закрываешь глаза и музыка визуализируется у тебя в голове. а концепция этих альбомов вообще заключается в том, что это саундтрек к несуществуещему фильму. тут блин в альбоме скримеры есть, саспенс какой то. я реально пару раз шуганулся. очень сильная атмсофера, погружает шо пиздец. ещё и музыка на некоторых треках разрыв ебала. но только как же сложно послушать этот альбом. я не нашёл его ни на одном стриминге, на ютубе он забанен, даже блин в перезаливе в вк, где у него 2 прослушивания (реально 2), и то заблокирован второй трек альбома. но в целом остался прям под впечатлением. короче пизда
оценка - 9/10
Nov 24 2023
Author
Fabulous album of potential movie soundtracks, a complete surprise to me as no idea who Barry Adamson was. Now I can't get tracks like Miles out of my head. It's not just the memorability of the tunes, it is their diversity and the imaginative arrangements. Instantly likeable
Nov 23 2023
Author
Eeeeeediupis. Smeeedipus
Nov 17 2023
Author
burner!
Oct 13 2023
Author
Experimental music. Brit oscuro.
Sep 15 2023
Author
Hey, this is surprisingly good. I even knew a couple of the tracks.
Also fun to hear Jarvis Cocker.
Sep 08 2023
Author
Kinda all over the place but . . . very much not bad!
Mar 23 2023
Author
This album is terrifying.
It's been a long while since we had an album so shocking, disturbing and well... surprising. This album was a mystery, I'd never heard of it before, and after it was finished, I wasn't sure what I had listened to.
Some of it I really liked, no questions asked. But, other tracks sounded as if they were hanging on the precipice of madness and horror... and were inviting me in.
Taken as a whole, it gave me goosebumps, it was a moving and a wholly unsettling experience.
Highly recommend.
Aug 19 2022
Author
That was strange and surreal. From dark to jaunty and upbeat at the drop of a hat. I’ve never heard anything like this. Great album.
Jul 14 2022
Author
Damn, Adamson is a beast. What a strange, yet cohesive album.
Jun 09 2022
Author
Oh this is awesome - one of my fave discoveries from this project so far! Starts off sounding like it's going to be a "Screamadelica"-era Primal Scream knock off, and then gets properly weird, I love it.
Proto doom jazz! 💀
Fave track - "The Vibes Ain't Nothin' But The Vibes" and "It's Business As Usual" for being that one two punch that lets you know this album is not what you thought it was. "Dirty Barry" is awesome too. And I love a bit of Nick Cave, so "The Sweetest Embrace" is another highlight....
May 12 2022
Author
Way way way better than Moss Side Story, despite this one having now Dave Graney input. Can see a lot of these being perfect soundtrack tunes
Apr 30 2022
Author
Experimental music. Brit oscuro.
Apr 29 2022
Author
very cool
Jan 23 2022
Author
i want this to play in the background of my life 24/7
Dec 27 2021
Author
Emotional rollercoaster.
4
Holy shit this is one unique album. I love it. Though some songs give me that bad 90s film feeling that I also get when seeing that DVD-ad: "You wouldn't download a car", I think it more than makes up for it with eeriness and diversity.
"Vermillion Kisses" hit me like a train.
5
Dec 27 2021
Author
10/10 album full of so many different moods, it can be dark and tense or fun and upbeat
just such a great work of art overall
Dec 09 2021
Author
1996 - Genre: Alternative/Indie (jazz, beat, hip-hop)
Jul 15 2021
Author
Saved Prior: None
*Since this is meant to ape a soundtrack it's more difficult than usual to rank these songs because some of the songs that work best as soundscapes are the less enjoyable ones to listen to on their own, so I'm just going to rank by how much I enjoyed listening to them.*
Not Saved:
13. Dirty Barry
12. It's Business As Usual
11. State Of Contraction
Saved:
10. Set The Controls For The Heart Of The Pelvis
9. The Big Bamboozle
8. The Vibes Ain't Nothin' But The Vibes
7. Set The Controls Again
6. In A Moment Of Clarity
5. Achieved In The Valley In The [Spotify sic] Dolls
4. Vermillion Kisses
3. Miles
2. Something Wicked This Way Comes
1. The Sweetest Embrace
Overall Notes: I'm sure I'm not the first to say that I don't think we needed two "soundtrack to an imaginary film" albums from this guy. Nevertheless I really enjoy these things, especially now that he decided to add words to some of the songs. They're fun, sue me!