[1] The album also includes two previously unreleased tracks, "Julian in the Underworld" and a rerecording of "Psychedelic Revolution", where Cope takes the lead vocal rather than guest singer Lucy Brownhills on the original version.
[2] Julian Cope said of the album, “Trip Advizer was released as my way of acknowledging that 15 years is, for some artists, a whole lifetime of work.
Of course, I could have been extra needy and made the thing a 2CD package, but my real intention was to adopt the position of some super-editor and cut to the chase.”[3] Oregano Rathbone of Record Collector rated the album four stars out of five and said "Trip Advizer ... consistently delivers defining examples of Cope’s artistic validity" and "It’s ever apparent that this krautrock devotee never lost sight of his pop instincts.
"[5] Ben Graham of The Quietus said that the album "begins at roughly the point that he fell off most people's radar," but proves that "Cope's musical muse is still in rude health and that, in fact, the latter phase of his career has produced some of his most important and enjoyable work to date.
"[2] Leonard Nevarez of Sound It Out described the album as "a striking collection of anti-monotheist agit-pop and neolithic history lessons set to music," and said: "There’s a didactic tone to Trip Advizer, with lyrics railing against capitalist “greedheads” and the bloodshed, oppression, and cultural erasures legitimated by the “desert gods” of Christianity, Judaism and Islam.