The Else

The Else
Studio album by
ReleasedMay 15, 2007
Recorded20062007
StudioKampo Studios, Manhattan
Avatar Studios, Manhattan
Loho Studios, Manhattan
Collyer Brothers Studio, Brooklyn
Soy Bomb Studio, Sullivan County
The Boat, Los Angeles
GenreAlternative rock
Length38:12
LabelIdlewild, Zoë Records
ProducerThe Dust Brothers
Pat Dillett
They Might Be Giants
They Might Be Giants chronology
Venue Songs DVD/CD
(2005)
The Else
(2007)
Here Come the 123s
(2008)
Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
SourceRating
Metacritic(73/100)
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic
The A.V. ClubB
IGN(8.5/10)
The Music Box
Now
Pitchfork Media(5.3/10)
PopMatters
Robert Christgau
Spin(6/10)
StylusB+

The Else is the twelfth studio album by rock group They Might Be Giants, released by Idlewild Recordings on May 15, 2007. The album was produced in part by the Dust Brothers, along with Pat Dillett and the band.

The Else was first available for download through the iTunes Store on May 15, 2007. The CD version was released in stores on July 10, 2007, with initial runs accompanied by a full-length bonus disc of rare material, Cast Your Pod to the Wind (the title being a parody of jazz pianist Vince Guaraldi’s 1962 hit "Cast Your Fate to the Wind"). On September 11, 2007, the band released a gatefold vinyl LP of the album. Cast Your Pod was made available separately on iTunes in July 2009.

"Contrecoup" was originally written and recorded in 2005 as part of a challenge issued on the Next Big Thing in which lexicographer Erin McKean implored John Linnell to use the words "contrecoup", "craniosophic", and "limerent" in a song so that the words could be added to or remain in the dictionary.

A video, created by Mizushima Hine, for "With the Dark" was released on the band's YouTube page on June 7, 2007. Two additional videos, for "The Shadow Government" and "I'm Impressed", were also later released. A full-length video for "The Mesopotamians" was released on Stereogum.com on October 2.

"Careful What You Pack" was originally written for the soundtrack of 2009 film Coraline, but it was not used in the film.