Anthony Ruptak - Tourist (2025)

Artist: Anthony Ruptak
Title: Tourist
Year Of Release: 2025
Label: Self-released
Genre: Pop Folk, Indie Folk, Singer-Songwriter
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 58:39
Total Size: 347 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist: Title: Tourist
Year Of Release: 2025
Label: Self-released
Genre: Pop Folk, Indie Folk, Singer-Songwriter
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 58:39
Total Size: 347 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
01. TOURIST (4:55)
02. TRAUMA NAKED (5:53)
03. PHANTASMAGORIA (7:34)
04. PTARMIGAN (5:08)
05. IS THIS REAL LIFE (8:33)
06. XONM (4:38)
07. BLUEBIRD (5:13)
08. SHITSHOW (3:58)
09. GREED (4:13)
10. LENNY'S REST (8:44)
If Ruptak describes the album as “a broad collection of ruminations on the overall state of the world in the year 2025”, then “Phantasmagoria” is the perfect snapshot single, a glimpse into the heart of the album, a teaser and taste for the larger work.
Broadly reminiscent of those shimmering, folk-infused indie bands of the early 2000s, such as Bright Eyes, Midlake or Bon Iver, it is a gorgeously subtle piece, one that uses emotion and understatement as its chief weapons, building a soundscape that ebbs and flows between articulate folk fonesse and lush indie artistry. These understatement, these motifs, and musical touches merely frame the lyrics, allowing their message to be clearly heard, succinct, and sonically uncluttered.
And if the message were not clear enough, the video drives it home: a series of vignettes, scenes, and scenarios that encapsulate the narrator’s frustration and anxieties, whilst underlining just how detached we have become from the real world, thanks to technology and anti-social media. Watch to the end, there’s a brilliant, if stark, visual punchline.
If you can listen to “Phantasmagoria” and not want to buy the album immediately, or failing that, try to change the world, then perhaps music is not for you after all!
Broadly reminiscent of those shimmering, folk-infused indie bands of the early 2000s, such as Bright Eyes, Midlake or Bon Iver, it is a gorgeously subtle piece, one that uses emotion and understatement as its chief weapons, building a soundscape that ebbs and flows between articulate folk fonesse and lush indie artistry. These understatement, these motifs, and musical touches merely frame the lyrics, allowing their message to be clearly heard, succinct, and sonically uncluttered.
And if the message were not clear enough, the video drives it home: a series of vignettes, scenes, and scenarios that encapsulate the narrator’s frustration and anxieties, whilst underlining just how detached we have become from the real world, thanks to technology and anti-social media. Watch to the end, there’s a brilliant, if stark, visual punchline.
If you can listen to “Phantasmagoria” and not want to buy the album immediately, or failing that, try to change the world, then perhaps music is not for you after all!