The artist T.O.P has returned with his full album ANOTHER DIMENSION on April 3.
The album offers multiple perspectives, heard from a single narrator residing in another dimension. It is not mere a collection of songs so much as a sprawling, immersive mythology — eleven tracks that each conjure their own world while orbiting a single, restless consciousness at the center.
The album opens with “SELF CRUCIFIXION,” a conceptual statement of intent: radios, televisions, sheet music, and sensory fragments coalesce into a single face, each feature drawn from a different image. It’s a portrait of an artist as a crossroads, a figure through whom thousands of stories simultaneously pass. From the very first track, the album frames itself as an act of compression — isolating fragments of experience and fusing them into something whole.
That theme of transformation deepens on “THE GIANT,” where a bloated, mirror-distorted body casts the shadow of a T. rex. Objects float unmoored from gravity. The figure eats himself and is reborn. It is not triumph being depicted here, but the raw, violent act of becoming — of consuming one’s former self in order to grow into something unrecognizable.
The album’s middle section explores fragmentation of a different kind. “Studio54” renders a single face sliced into shards and reflected across countless angled mirrors, each reflection subtly different — a three-dimensional portrait of creative madness in which chaos is not the obstacle but the foundation. Meanwhile, “A SMALL, FILTHY SHOW WINDOW” stages a quieter confrontation: the artist standing on a nighttime city street, gazing through glass at his own expressionless past self, neon lights and a glass of liquor dissolving the boundary between present and memory.
There is tenderness woven between the more intense imagery. “ZERO-COKE” offers a fleeting, dreamlike respite — a figure holding a unicorn in one hand and a Zero Coke in the other, bubbles rising and becoming stars. It is a moment of pure, fluid imagination before the album pushes further outward. “Another Dimension Holy dude!!!!!!!!” goes cosmic, depicting a small figure dragging a moon-shaped like an eye across a surreal landscape — the precise instant consciousness breaks through into a higher plane.
“SEOUL CHAOS” returns to earth with vivid urban energy, translating the sensory overload of a city of skyscrapers into an explosion of geometry and color — hot air balloons drifting above winding hillside roads, the gray monotony of Seoul shattered into something alive and electric.
“DESPERADO” introduces the album’s most striking formal conceit: clock hands become the Sun and the Moon, and love is reframed not as a still photograph but as a dynamic collision of celestial rhythms — the Moon setting, the Sun rising, two opposing forces caught in a single eternal moment.
The final trio of tracks moves toward reflection and stillness. “FOR FANS” is a tribute rendered in vivid color — childhood snack cones scattered like tiny stars, the texture of small joys preserved in layers of pigment before they dissolve. “STENDHAL SYNDROME” strips everything away: a figure alone at the last station stop, the performance over, the moon setting. In the album’s logic, this bareness is not an ending but a beginning — the place where new inspiration is born. And “BE SOLID” closes the record with a solitary figure perched atop a massive rectangular form, holding still at the center of a morphing, surreal world. It is his fortress. His only fixed reality.
Taken together, the album moves like consciousness itself — fragmented, expansive, tender, chaotic, and ultimately searching for the one solid thing that doesn’t change.

