The album achieved commercial success in the UK, and was well received by music critics.
Content
Around about the time of the album's release, frontman Jason Lytle commented that the album "represents the closest I've been to singing in the first person, writing passionately".[2]
The album is the group's highest charting in the UK, peaking at No. 22.[3] By 2006, the album had sold 110,000 copies.[4]
An expanded version of the album was released five months later, with a bonus disc of songs recorded live at the Glastonbury Festival in 2003 (tracks 1–6) as well as three tracks taken from The Black Sessions in Paris (tracks 7–9).
A 20th anniversary box set titled Sumday Twunny was released in August 2023.[5]
Singles
Three singles were released from the album: "El Caminos in the West", which reached No. 48 on the UK Singles Chart;[6] "Now It's On", which reached No. 23; and "I'm on Standby".
PopMatters viewed the album as one where Lytle had decided to "tone down on the experimentation, and concentrate on developing some terrific melodies", calling it "really the next logical step for the band". He commented on similarities to the Alan Parsons Project ("Now It's On"), ELO ("The Go in the Go-for-It") and John Lennon ("Lost on Yer Merry Way"), and noted an improvement in Lytle's songwriting.[18] The CMJ New Music Report made it their 'essential release' in May 2003, calling it a "genuinely wholehearted work",[19] and in their end-of-year review placed it at No. 7 in their list of the top albums of the year.[20]Jim DeRogatis, in his book Turn on Your Mind: Four Decades of Great Psychedelic Rock, viewed the melodies as "even more effervescent and more memorable" than on The Sophtware Slump.[21] Sophie Best of The Age called it "another sprawling sonic Grandaddy adventure, shimmering with wistful sincerity and rural-tinged psychedelia".[2]NME gave it a grade of 8/10, writing that the songs sound "pretty much like Neil Young if he'd heard an Aphex Twin record".[13]Robert Christgau of The Village Voice gave the album a one-star honorable mention rating and cited "The Group Who Couldn't Say" and "Stray Dog and the Chocolate Shake" as highlights.[22]
A less favorable review came from Heather Phares of AllMusic, who described the record as being "bland and complacent", opining that it failed to live up to the expectations of The Sophtware Slump.[8] A 2023 review of the 20th anniversary reissue from Arielle Gordon of Pitchfork described it as "wide-open" and "a prescient meditation on the need to escape" that "stood apart from its predecessors".[5]