Murder of the Universe received positive reviews from music critics. On
Metacritic, the album holds an average critic score of 73/100, based on 15 reviews, indicating "generally favorable reviews". Writing about the album alongside King Gizzard as a broader cultural phenomenon, theorist Benjamin Kirbach argues that: In
Tolkien, the Balrog is a
demon awakened inadvertently by the Dwarves of
Moria. This ancient agent of retribution is no doubt Tolkien's metaphor for the hubris of
modernity—and
Gandalf must sacrifice himself so that
Frodo et al. can escape its fiery contempt. In King Gizzard, the Balrog is similarly provoked by technological obtrusion ("You made the atom split / It caused a massive rift / And he came screaming through"). Like
Godzilla, it wreaks havoc upon civilization—until the fabled Lord of Lightning appears. The beast is tamed, as it were, by the power of electricity. Kirbach claims that the name Han-Tyumi itself is a "vaguely
nipponized anagram of 'humanity,'" and that the character represents an
A.I. born from the primordial ooze of global information networks that continue to function even after human beings themselves have died out ("BORN, IF YOU MAY CALL IT THAT / IN A WORLD THAT IS DENSE AND BLACK"). A prisoner of this
solipsistic pedigree, with no point of reference but the archive of now-extinct human knowledge at his disposal, Han-Tyumi pines for his biological counterpart and becomes obsessed with two things that as a machine he cannot do: vomit and die. In an inversion of the
Frankenstein myth, Han-Tyumi then constructs a humanoid body with whom he intends to fuse his consciousness (the computer even says, in no uncertain terms, "I DECLARED TO MY DESIGN / LIKE FRANKENSTEIN'S MONSTER / 'I AM YOUR FATHER, I AM YOUR GOD'"). This unholy merger triggers a
chain-reaction in which the machine-human hybrid simultaneously ingests and regurgitates itself in
infinite regress. As if throwing
dialectical history into reverse, the bilious anti-
singularity spills out and eventually coats the entire universe in vomit. . . . At the end of the album, the A.I.'s voice slows and tapers off in a digital swansong not unlike that of
HAL 9000's. In sum,
Murder of the Universe 's
psych-rock opera presents a
mythopoetic allegory of human technogenesis: from the primal prosthesis of the altered beast to the illusory
enframing of nature via electricity, and finally the zombified imprint of ourselves we leave behind as Han-Tyumi.
Accolades == Track listing ==