User Score
7.7

Generally favorable reviews- based on 41 Ratings

User score distribution:
  1. Positive: 35 out of 41
  2. Negative: 3 out of 41
Buy Now
Buy on

Review this album

  1. Your Score
    0 out of 10
    Rate this:
    • 10
    • 9
    • 8
    • 7
    • 6
    • 5
    • 4
    • 3
    • 2
    • 1
    • 0
    • 0
  1. Submit
  2. Check Spelling
  1. Dec 21, 2020
    4
    I discovered GAS by its 'Pop' album (2000). I really enjoyed it: it was deep, changing, questionning, heading and bright.

    'Narkopop' is another piece of work. GAS obviously kept his ambient style but here it feels like he put less effort in it. There are more tracks but less beat variance and almost all tracks are paired to the same grey fog. We quickly have the impression of getting
    I discovered GAS by its 'Pop' album (2000). I really enjoyed it: it was deep, changing, questionning, heading and bright.

    'Narkopop' is another piece of work. GAS obviously kept his ambient style but here it feels like he put less effort in it. There are more tracks but less beat variance and almost all tracks are paired to the same grey fog. We quickly have the impression of getting lost in the project while waiting for something to happen. And when something does happen, it's miles away from our expectations.

    Anyway 'Narkopop' remains a nice project to listen to during work and study sessions when we get tired of any other style of music.
    Expand

Awards & Rankings

Metascore
86

Universal acclaim - based on 14 Critic Reviews

Critic score distribution:
  1. Positive: 14 out of 14
  2. Mixed: 0 out of 14
  3. Negative: 0 out of 14
  1. The Wire
    Aug 8, 2017
    90
    Narkopop has a symphonic majesty, a sense of form and forward movement that no prior Gas record quite reached. Voigt's forest no longer merely murmurs; it positively exults. [May 2017, p.46]
  2. May 25, 2017
    80
    The meditatively plodding drums are off-putting if focused on too deliberately, but there is little else to fault here for those who like to zone out into infinity, with the 17-minute long closer being particularly peachy.
  3. May 1, 2017
    80
    Whatever the differences on Narkopop, the album is remarkably true to the project's past: this is music that takes inspiration from childhood memories, bygone eras and the natural world. The results can feel like another dimension, but the album is also intensely personal.