The Greatest Non Hits podcast

Tame Impala: Lonerism

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That opening “look out, look out” isn’t just a goofy clip. It’s the doorway into a real question we can’t shake: how does Tame Impala’s Lonerism sound both childlike and haunted, like a bad dream you still want to replay? We start by connecting the Dumbo “Pink Elephants” melody to the swirling, woozy logic of Kevin Parker’s sound, then follow that thread into the bigger influence map. Along the way we hear Pink Floyd “Money” energy, Beatles-bright harmony instincts, and flashes of classic rock attitude that somehow never feel like cosplay.

From there we go track by track through the album’s most talked-about moments and a few under-loved ones, reacting to the synth-heavy choices, the punchy drums, and the transitions that feel engineered by a perfectionist at 3 a.m. We spend time on the cult giants like “Apocalypse Dreams,” the hooky pull of “Mind Mischief,” the forward-motion rush of “Music To Walk Home By,” and the uneasy tension inside “Why Won’t They Talk To Me.” We also zoom out to the album’s core theme: lonerism as a full psychological setting, where being detached can feel like safety and punishment at the same time.

We wrap by debating a question every fan ends up asking: are the lyrics the point, or is the voice just another instrument in the mix? Then we lock in our favorite non-hit picks and argue about what even counts as a “hit” when a deep cut feels life-changing. If Lonerism means something to you, subscribe, share this with a friend who loves psychedelic rock, and leave us a review with your top three tracks.

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