









Just why this deeply trippy album gets such a negative write-up from various Prog Archives contributors is something of a mystery to this writer, because this is actually rather wonderful. Released in 2005, this was the fourth album issued under the Amorphous Androgynous moniker adopted by Gary Cobain and Brian Dougans, a London-based duo perhaps better known to some as both the popular underground dance act The Future Sound of London and the compilers of several volumes of the excellent A Monstrous Psychedelic Bubble Exploding In Your Mind series of compilation albums.
Despite their background in dance music however, the twosome obviously have a deep fondness for a wide variety of funk, rock, jazz and folk-based 1960’s and 1970’s psychedelia, and Alice In Ultraland is an impressive testament to that love. Skilfully blending dance elements, woozy beats and ambient washes with proggy instrumental flourishes and a dazzling array of psychedelic sound effects, this arguably ranks as the finest of all Amorphous Androgynous albums, though die-hard prog-rockers may wince at some of the album’s more “contemporary” elements. But it’s their loss.
From the opening strains of the blissful opener “The Emptiness of Nothing”, to the cosmic grandeur of stand-out track “All Is Harvest” and the neon-coloured keyboard washes that pulse throughout “The World Is Full Of Plankton,” this lovingly crafted slice of neo-psychedelia rarely lets up, sweeping the listener along on a kaleidoscopic sonic journey brought to full life by the diamond sharp production.
Even the album’s sleeve manages to allude to the clever crossbreeding of hazy sixties ideals and 21st century cool, with an EMI stereo label cunningly placed in the corner of for true authenticity. A real trip from beginning to end, and all the way in between, Alice In Ultraland is a rare beast indeed. Those with an open mind will surely be in psychedelic heaven.