SKU: 55795650394

PLURALONE – DROP IN THE OCEAN (OCEAN COLORED VINYL) - LP •

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PLURALONE – DROP IN THE OCEAN (OCEAN COLORED VINYL) - LP •UPC: 711574982110 Label: ORG MUSIC Format: LP Release Date: June 12, 2026 In stock items ship within 48 hours Josh Klinghoffer has spent most of his life movingbetween bands, studios, tours, and collaborationsbut the songs he creates for his solo project Pluralone can feel more isolated, mysterious, nonlinear, and newly urgent. For the first time in my life, Klinghoffer says, I no longer feel like I have all the time in the world." In his fourth

UPC: 711574982110
Label: ORG MUSIC
Format: LP
Release Date: June 12, 2026
In stock items ship within 48 hours

Josh Klinghoffer has spent most of his life moving—between bands, studios, tours, and collaborations—but the songs he creates for his solo project Pluralone can feel more isolated, mysterious, nonlinear, and newly urgent. “For the first time in my life,” Klinghoffer says, “I no longer feel like I have all the time in the world."

In his fourth album, A Drop in the Ocean, out from Org Music on June 12, 2026, Klinghoffer had a desire to return to the basics: just himself with an acoustic guitar, where many of these songs first took shape. This decision was grounding for Klinghoffer, a multi-instrumentalist accustomed to endless sonic choices. Now, writing on acoustic guitar, he felt he could regain some of the clarity that gets lost when working on songs for years at a time. Some songs, like “I Feel Like I’ve Done Wrong,” date back to 2022; others, like “Give,” have lingered for close to two decades.

The album’s closing track, “Sadly,” leaves intact an iPhone voice memo of Klinghoffer writing the song in real time. “I knew I’d never outdo the innocence of that moment,” he says about the decision to not re-record the piano. “I’m gonna try,” Klinghoffer sings in “Sadly,” “No idea why / It’s a drop in the ocean.” This speaks to Klinghoffer’s relentless determination to create music in an era of constant distraction, suggesting that the act of creation itself, even in its roughest form, may be the whole point.

In the first single, “Peer Into Your Dreams,” a fragile folk-inspired pattern opens a disorienting meditation on perception and wandering inside someone else’s imagined world (“Are you really with me?” he asks). In the second single, “Ranting and Raving,” soft electric guitar is layered with acoustic guitar and then soaring synths as Klinghoffer sings: “I hear you’re always ranting and raving / Making up for having no one to count on / Telling myself I’m wrong now.” The “you” throughout the album remains unstable: sometimes it seems as if Klinghoffer is speaking directly to himself, asking, Did I do the right thing?

This album also sees Klinghoffer expanding the world of Pluralone—he brought on past collaborator Eric Palmquist as a producer for the first time, and writer Chelsea Hodson sings backing vocals on a few songs. One of the songs, “Give,” is anchored in Nashville tuning, a technique typically used for shimmer and texture rather than as a song’s foundation. This kind of unlikely decision adds up to a heightened sense of atmosphere, and the feeling that Klinghoffer is in new territory here, building a world distinctly his own.

Loss is a central theme of the album: whether confronting grief on “I Hope You Knew” (quietly released on March 25, the anniversary of friend Taylor Hawkins’ passing), or anticipating heartbreak on “I Don’t Want to Let You Go” (in which the lyrics “Look up at the sky / Wondering how and why” lead into the album’s closest thing to a lighter-in-the-air moment of hope).

Klinghoffer recorded these songs at his own NowSpace and at Palmquist Studios, both in El Sereno, California. In between high-profile stints for Pearl Jam, Elton John; Brandi Carlile, and Jane’s Addiction, one gets the sense that Pluralone emerges as the space he returns to when the noise subsides.

“My whole life has been about learning to enjoy the process rather than rushing to get to the result,” Klinghoffer says. The past four years are the longest stretch he’s endured between Pluralone albums, and that patience is audible within the album’s lived-in intimacy. As he sings in “Peer Into Your Dreams”: “Isn’t it freeing / A slight change in belief?”
 

TRACK LIST:

1. Feels Like I've Done Wrong
2. Peer Into Your Dreams
3. Too Much Time's Gone By
4. Simple Action
5. I Hope You Knew
6. I Don't Want To Let You Go
7. Ranting and Raving
8. Give
9. Who What You
10. Sadly
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Perfect Adaptation of Lovecraft's Story
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Gou Tanabe has been making probably the best manga/comic adaptations of Lovecraft's works recently, and this depiction of "The Shadow Over Innsmouth" is by far the best. Tanabe really captures visually what Lovecraft was conveying via the text of the original story. Innsmouth is decrepit and rotting, the locals are sinister, and the deep ones are hideous. And, as always, Tanabe's art is of the highest quality. I can't recommend this enough, and I eagerly await whatever adaptation he does next.
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★★★★★ 4
Gou has done it again.
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I like the original text, I love the adaptation because it doesn't stray too far from it. The illustration is beautiful and sometimes gross (In a good way, I mean it's a cosmic horror about people turning into fish, maybe don't read it right before a meal or before bed.) Gou Tanabe has been working through many of H.P Lovecraft's more popular or interesting stories and this one is just about as good as the rest. The translation as always is very good throughout with only one or two "Wait, what?" moments which could have come from reading the original text differently. I definitely recommend this book and several of others from Gou Tanabe if you love cosmic horror, manga, or H.P Lovecraft.
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G.Wort
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An Eldritch Tale Deserving the Manga Treatment
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One of Lovecraft's very best (and my personal favourite of his macabre tales), rendered in grotesque mana style. While it doesn't eclipse its inspiration, I thoroughly enjoyed this unique take on a classic tale.
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Keeps children and adults even interested. My little one wants to read over and over again. It’s very cool and educational which I love. It sparks the love of science and learning.
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