Invisible Means is a studio album by the English/American experimental rock quartet French Frith Kaiser Thompson.
[1] In a review of the album in The Santa Fe New Mexican, Steve Terrell called French Frith Kaiser Thompson "the world's most obscure 'supergroup'".
[3] He says this collaboration is led by Kaiser, with his "whacky, ecclectic [sic] approach to rock", and Thompson, "break[ing] out of his own mold" and "experimenting with ... sheer craziness".
[3] Terrell liked the playfulness of Kaiser's "The Nearsighted Heron" and "Days of Our Lives", and Thompson's "mock opera", "March of the Cosmetic Surgeons".
[3] Mark Deming at AllMusic described Invisible Means as "calmer, and a bit easier to digest" than their first album, Live, Love, Larf & Loaf, but complained that it "lacks ... the playful wit and high spirits" of that album.