A New World Odor's 30 tracks mark the end of the early Stomock period and herald much of what was to come in the next ten years. The Right Stomock's growing musical skills were growing while the Left Stomock was getting distracted by graduate school and other distractions. This is the first Stomock album to feature a large number of tracks that do not feature both band members. Here's one of those tracks: "Gilded Noise" by the Right Stomock.
Democracy gets annoyed
when you're young and unemployed.
God speaks to everyone but me.
I see him on TV. What a country.
Aside from the very Right-Stomockian lyrics and effectively spacey echo, it's notable for the glorious bloopy-bloop keyboard. Three sounds dominate the album: that keyboard, the Right Stomock's bass, and a drum machine in a music lab in Iowa City, Iowa.