We Have Dozens of Titles is Gastr del Sol’s Anti-Greatest Hits Compilation
The legendary Chicago experimental duo release rarities and live recordings more than 25 years after disbanding, further cementing the impression they made on experimental music in the 1990s.

It wouldn’t feel right to say that they don’t make bands like Gastr del Sol anymore—David Grubbs and Jim O’Rourke are quite prolific still, as they facilitate the birth of future avant-gardes through production and teaching—but they really don’t. Over seven years and seven albums, the Chicago-based band became central players in a bubbling experimental rock scene that toyed with the freakiest tools of folk and the mathiest permutations of rock. At their most accessible, they retained a futuristic cool; at their most cerebral, they still maintained a way in. Once they dropped Camoufleur in 1998, it felt like the world was just about to get Gastr del Sol, but its leading duo retired the band to pursue their next projects. Just look at their resumes (a great solo career for Grubbs; O’Rourke taking a stint in Sonic Youth before tackling a revered solo career of his own).
We Have Dozens of Titles marks the band’s surprise return—kind of. The release is an archival album that’s spent the last 26 years in latency; Gastr del Sol’s unorganized studio and live recordings have emerged from their cryogenic slumbers in a sprawling collection. Featuring live performances of favorites like “The Seasons Reverse” and “Dictionary of Handwriting,” alongside the entirety of 1995’s avant-jazz opus “The Harp Factory on Lake Street,” Titles is a stately release offering a little something for every fan and functioning as a gate for the uninitiated. It would be a big stretch to call this a “greatest hits” compilation, but there is a celebratory component to Titles that justifies the length.
The collection starts where the band left off: with a recording of “The Seasons Reverse” from the band’s last show in 1997. A generation later, “The Seasons Reverse” remains a beloved favorite and an inviting entry point for new fans. In total, there are five live recordings on We Have Dozens of Titles, each offering a snapshot-in-time of a beloved composition. “Ursus Arctos Wonderfilis” from The Serpentine Similar is a proper jam that sounds just a touch looser, more haptic live. This version of “Blues Subtitled No Sense of Wonder” is special: Where the track from Camoufleur serves as a lyrical specter from which the phrase “I have dozens of titles” becomes We Have Dozens of Titles, the live version is double the length and double the heart, somehow.