[7][8][9] Inside the lighthouse, the band composed songs for the album, which they subsequently recorded in a studio.
[8] Explaining why they decided to work in Galtarviti, Múm member Gunnar Örn Tynes said: We went there and we really liked the place... We were connected to it.
[7]Hot Press critic James Kelleher described Finally We Are No One as "a luscious 56-minute lullaby for troubled heads, sung quietly and played with delicate precision.
"[16] Q found the album "utterly unique" and highlighted Múm's "curious combination of bright-eyed playfulness and maudlin moods",[14] while in Rolling Stone, Jon Caramanica commented that the band "find majestic sounds in unlikely places.
wrote, "Glitches, moody organs and slow, heavy beats are thrown all over the place, mixed in with some of the most magical sounds, which seem as though they are covered in pixie dust.