The Greatest Non Hits podcast

Alt-J: All of This is Yours

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Alt-J’s This Is All Yours sounds like it was engineered for headphones, late nights, and people who love albums that reward repeat listens. We are Chris and Tim, and we take this one track by track, chasing what makes the band’s “quiet” approach feel so big: spare guitar lines, careful harmonies, unexpected percussion, and those left-turn moments that only an art-school indie rock band from Leeds would try.

Along the way, we talk about the band’s origin story and why their early dorm-room limitations may have shaped the whole record’s identity. We dig into the meditative pull of “Arrival In Nara” and “Nara,” the playful intensity of “Every Other Freckle,” and the way the songs hint at bigger themes without turning into a lecture. We also call out the sonic details we cannot stop hearing, from layered keys to bold dropouts that make certain tracks feel almost cinematic.

We set one rule: “Left Hand Free” is the hit, so it is off the board. Everything else is fair game. That leads us to a real debate over the album’s strongest deep cuts, including “Choice Kingdom,” “Hunger Of The Pine,” and “Gospel Of John Hurt,” plus a quick nod to how the bonus “Lovely Day” puts a clean finish on the whole listen.

If you care about 2010s indie rock, experimental folk textures, and album reviews that actually rank the songs, hit play. Subscribe, share this with a friend who loves Alt-J, and leave a review then tell us which non-hit deserves the top spot.

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