This was made before their first album, but it somehow sounds much better to me despite being stylistically very similar. Very fun listening.
Track 1 is just a really creepy, short intro to track 2, which is perhaps a top-5 King Gizzard track for me. Then Track 3 loses me completely, but I do get the appeal for it.
This album is not my style, but I completely understand the hype and appeal. I can appreciate it without loving it. However, "The Bitter Boogie" stands out to me as one of the all-time great KGLW tracks, and it was one of my top 5 most-played of 2024.
I love this for study music, but that doesn't give it enough credit. "The River" is a well-deserved fan-favorite, but my personal favorite is "Lonely Steel Sheet Flyer". The other two are at least intriguing, but I do tune out a bit before the 10:10 runtimes end.
This album starts strong and really doesn't let up. I don't really love "Satan Speeds Up", but really everything else is immensely catchy and vibe-y.
Definitely odd. "Alluda Majaka" kicks ass, "Vegemite" does not.
Two all-time great KGLW tracks here, a couple intriguing and overall pretty good ones, and a few "meh" tracks I just don't return to all that much. The sitar paired with the psych electric guitar is the absolute driving force of this album.
Some great music initially but it quickly begins to bore me, and although I do like the concept, I think "Murder of the Universe" does the narration far better.
Really doesn't do much for me, but I love the energy and enthusiasm
Unironic 99, I promise. Starts off with a bang and continues to for, well, infinity. Also has to be the coolest-looking colored vinyl record I own.